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                  <text>Reagan's hill reduces tax burden
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan wants to sharply cut Social
·Security benefits for Americans who
retire early, offer more incentives
for people wflo work past age 65 and
., J;educe the t;.x .burden for workers
, wbo pay into the system, administration sources say.
Reagan's plan, ·being revealed
today by Health and Humim Ser. vices Secretary Richard S. Sch·
weiker, Is a far-reaching set of

proposals designed to ll3Ve the ·
destitute system from possible
bankruptcy.
Highlights of the· package to be
submitted to Congress, as outlined
by White House SOW'ces who asked
not to be identified, included:
-More than doubling the penalty for
people who retire before age 65. Instead of getting 80 percent of full
Social Security benefits at 62, they
wOUld get only 55 percent.

e
IN ATI'ENDANCE- Attending the Super Excellent
Master degree services Saturday eyening at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple were, front row, l·r, James
Knight, past grand master, grand council, Richard L.

Harless, grand mnster of Urbana, Arthur 0. Marter, .
grand P. C. W.; back, Jesse Brinker, sixth arch inspecter, David L. Stickel, third arch inspecter or
Carlisle.

Area deaths
Myrtle Warner
Mrs. Myrtle Warner, 82, Syracuse,
died Sunday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
She was a daughter of the late
Frank and Adeline Nease Bailey.
She was also preceded in death by
her husband, Dayton; two sistesrs;
a brother, and a great-grandson.
Surviving ar~ a son, Dale G. Warner, Syracuse; two grandsons,
James Warner, Syracuse, and John
Warner, Athens; a granddaughter,
Dorothy, Syracuse, two great-grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews.
.
She attended the Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. James
P. Kittle officiating. BW"ial will be
in Sutton Methodist Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after 7 this evening.

Market report
OHIO VALLE't'
LIVESTOCK CQ.

MARKET REPORT

&amp;! It:' every Sa tu rd~:~y at 1 p.m. Prices taken

from lhe auction or Stt turday . May 9. Trends:
Veal ca lvt!S UO to S6.1 5 lower. Cows $1 to $2.5(1
lower. F'ffiler cattle steady. Total head $19.
Feeder Steers : Good a nd Choice 250 tll 300 lbs.
68-81 ; 300 to 400 lbti. 66.56-30; 400 to 500 Jbs. Ga .s.G79: 500 to 600 lb!i. fi3..75. ~ ; 600 tu 700 lb.s . 60-70; 700
tu 800 lbli. S&gt;tS.:;o; tKlO and over 48-G I.
Ftedcr Hdfer:s : Goodi:i nd Choi('t' 250 tu ~OO lbs.
58-70: 300 to 400 Ill£. 59-68; 400 to 500 lbs. ~. 5(1 ;
500 to 600 lbs. 54-65 : 800 to 700 lbs. 43-55 : 700 tu BOO
lb:.oi. 45-S2.5; 800 a nd over 42-57.50.
Feeder Bulls: GUild and Choice 25{1 tu :100 lbs.
66-72.50 ; 300 lu400 lbs. 64-76; tOO to500 lb.~ . 61.5()..

71.50; 500 to 600 lb.s. ~ . 50 : 600 to 700 lbs. SJ.-61;
700 to800 Ills. 5J-!i9.50: 800:~nd uv~r W-~ .
Hol.!itein Slt!t!r.! and bulls 300 tu600 lbs. [)8.73.
Bulls 1.000 lbs. and up 43-54.:'JO.
Sla~ht ~r cows - utl litic.s 41 -oW : CH illlcr~ and
cuttt!rs 3H0.25.
Springer c ow ~ - by the hcad28a-500.
CUw/1-calves - by the he~t d 4~10
Vea l calves - chuit·e e~ n d prime 74-86: ~ood ~
63.
Blt by Ci:i hleS 4{1-120.
Tup H u~~ 210 to 230 100. 29. ~ 1.7~ : AtJ &lt;Irs l:J.
36.15.
Piw; - by the head 21-36.
Sows 450 lbs. ami up 2f).JS.
ATHENS lJV ~IOCK SALF..S
Alba ny, Ohio
May 9, 1981

CATTLE PRICES,
F'~ cr Siers: fGood and Choice I 300-500 lbs.
60.5&amp;32; 500-100 lbs. Sli.:&gt;.S-11.00.
F'eedt!r Hei(ers : (Guud and Choice 1;m..r,oo lbs.

62.50-74 ; :il»-700 lbs. ~ 1 -73 . 50 .
rc L&lt;d~r

Bulls IGoud ;;md Chllice' l00-500 lbs.
65.25-al ; 500-700 lbs. 55-70 .75.
Slaughter Bulls : lOver 1,oo:l lbs. ' 47.75-54.25.
S la ugh~er Cows: UL!Iitics 40.50-43 : Canners
and Cutters 35-39 . ~ .
Springer Cows t By the H ~ad J 310-UO.
Cow and Cal rPa i r.~ {By the Un11J 460-630.
V ~ab : rChoice and pr ime I n~1 .
Baby Ca lve!! IBy the Heati152.50-IOO.
HOG PRICES ,
H u~::s : rNu. I, Barrows 11nd G i ll~J 200-230 Jbs.
"'l&lt;l.IIO.

Butcher Suws 32.50-36.
Butcher Boarl! 28.fl0.34 .50.
FffiterPil(s: rBythe Hcad J 17-38.

Chicken barbecue set
The Twin City Shrine Club will
hold a chicken barbecue in conjunction with il• monthly meeting at
7 this evening at the clubhouse in
Racine. All area Shriners are invited.

Al~xtmder

Frasc:r

Alexander R. (Alex) Fraser, 83,
Ravenswood, died Sunday morning
at Pomeroy Health C~re Center.
Mr. Fraser was born June 17,1897
a son of the late Soloman and Martha Ann Hawley Fraser. His wife,
Harriett L. Lewis Fraser died in
1974. He was also preceded in death
by three brothers, Howard, Donald
and Bing; two sisters, Maud Fraser
and Mamie Fraser Matthews.
Mr. Fraser was a retired boiler
maker for N. Y. Central and Penn
Central Raiiroa'ds for over 50 years.
He is survived by a daughter, Miss
Marcella Fraser, Ravenswood and a
daughter and son-in-law, Florence
and John Baker, Middleport ; son
and daughter-in-law, Ernie A. and
Judy Fraser, Stevensville, Montana ; two grandsons, Thomas
Baker, Middleport, and Scott
Fraser, Gallipolis; one granddaughter, Mrs. April Fraser Lund,
Stevensville,
Private funeral services will be
held Tuesc(ay at 2 p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home with the Rev. David Ridenour
offi ciating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home today from 2 to 4
and 7to9.

Files land suit
Asuit for foreclosure of a land contract was filed in Meigs County Common PLeas Court by Theresa
Fisher, Minersville, against
Kathryn Richards, administratrix of
the estate of Kathryn Ellen Fitchpatrick, deceased, Pomeroy, etal.
A suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act was filed
by Christine Anette Layne against
Leo Francie Layne.

Noon luncheon
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Cl ub will meet at noon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn.

Mc·c·t Tuesday

Wreck leaves

CLASS NAMED IN MEMORY- Aclaas of 21 mem- . aU four York Rite bodies. Pictured are thole who
bers of York Rite Bodies of Pomeroy received the .reeeJved the s1per excellent muter degree, first roW,
super excellent 11181iler degree Saturday nlgbL '1be 1-r, Mike Kelly, i&gt;o~d May, Deaay HlD,' Rocer HlD,
class was oamed In memory of the late Fred Blaellllar. Jerry Milam, Rebert Reed, illDJtriOIII muter, Ronald
Tbe late Mr. Blaettnar was active In aU York bodies, MIUer, IA:ooard Ly0111; second row, IJoyd Sayre,
and member of Knights of the York CroSs of Hoiwr for . Robert Ritchie, WIUiam Harrti, Fi'aDk MJUs; thlnl
over 25 years. To be eligible for Knights of the York row; Charles WIIBou, D. C. Allen, Cbarles Wlllfamsou,
Cross of Honor a member must be pretildlng officer In Robert Kuhn, Glen Xeuedy, and Johnny Prater. The
event wu beld at Pomeroy Muonic Temple.

Squads

have busy
weekend

On Saturday at 1:43 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Bertha Diehl
from Pomeroy Health Care Center
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; the
Syracuse Unit at 2:01 p.m. took
Gladys Wolfe and Alisha Kenny
from Texas Road to Veterans
Memorial following an accident, and
the Tuppers Plains Unit at 10:55
p.m., took Earl Ritchie from his
home on County Road 28, to St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg.
On Sunday at 3:54 p.m., the Middleport Unit took !;ted Staub from his
home at 10 Cottage Drive to Holzer
Medical Center and at5:20 p.m. took
Doris Steyens from BW'lingham to
Holzer Medical Center, and at 8:18
p.m. took Lui a Murray, Grant St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were issued to
William Roger Amberger, 25, Minersville and Rebecca M,arlene Painter,
23, Middleport; 'Randall Junior Cundiff, 18, Minersville, and Angela
Renee Lawhorn, 16, Pomeroy;
Richard Lee Williamson, 18,
Rutland, and Darla Kay Wilcox, 18,
Middleport.

Boosters to meet
Plans for band camp to be held at
Marietta will be made at a meeting

of the Eastern Local School District
Band Boosters to be held at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday in the band room of the high

school. The group will also discuss
Memorial Day parade and fund
raising projects.

Ir;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;

ELBERFELD$
KODAK
INSTAMATIC~

X-15F Camera
· Outfit

'17'5

Be ~ure to see the other cameras and camera
outf1t~ by Ko~ak and Polaroid plus a complete
select1on. of f1lm, flash equipment and camera
. accessones.
.

Gas breaks up demonstration

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
The Farmers Bank
•
•
Is your community
minded bank
•
serving.
Pomeroy
and
Meigs
.C ounty.

The Pomeroy Unit at 12:25 p.m.
took Robert Aldger, 21 Cave St., to
Veterans Memorial and at 11:48
a.m. took Myrl Roberts from
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Marriagc·s end
Veterans Memorial. The same unit
Four divorces were granted and at 4:50 p.m. took Mildred Beeson
two others were dissolved in Meigs from the health care center to
County Common Pleas Court.
Veterans Memorial and at 10:28
Granted divorces were Daniel R. p.m., Pomeroy took James Turley
Roush from Christine Francis from ' the health care center to
Roush; Ethel M. Morlan from Clyde Veterans Memorial.
J. Morlan ; Herman A. Taylor from
Syracuse Unit at ·2:39 a.m. took
Fona Taylor; Christine Ann Pullins Douglas R.ees and Steve Lavalley
from Floyd Dean Pullins.
from the scene of an accident in
Marriages dissolved were Vivian Syracuse to Veterans Memorial
Pierce and Carol Pierce; Linda Van- Hospital.
Meter and Charles VanMeter.

r.rJ
~

PARIS - The election of Socialist Francois Mitterrand as France's
president spurred a "near panic" on the stock market, an open lilt
among conservatives, and Communist Party demands for a ma}or
role in France's first leftist government in 23 years.
The most immediate question was how the French stock exchange
would perfonn today after a'sharp slide on what dealers called "Black
Monday," the day after Mitterrand won a seven-year tenn by
defeating conservatlve President Valery Giscard d'Estaing.

'

CLEVELAND - The nwnber selected Monday night in the Ohio Lot. tery's dally game "The Numblir" is 268.
The l~ reported earnings of $488,634 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery officials said II3les prior to the drawing totaled
$917,281, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $428,847.

•

INTERESTING- An Interest dllplay of ''people

replicas" used in emergency trainll)g proeeues was
featured by tbe Meigs COUDty Emer'geacy Medlell Sel'
vim at an open houe held at Vetera• Memorllll

HospUal Sunday for lbe •tart of National H01pltal

t

Week. Pictured with lbe display from lbe left are
Tereu Colll01, R.N., dlreetor of narslag; Bob Baney,
tOIUity coonllaator for lbe eme11eacy medleal lei'
vfca, aad 8eoU Laeu, admloiatralar Ill Veten•
Memorial Hwpllal.

F'arn1ers
Bank ·

Your Communit\ Owm•d Bank

Congress made it possible for
workers to draw benefits at age 62,
starting in 1961.

entine

IJy 12, 1981

I Secfion,8 Pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . N ewsp~per

POINT PLEASANT - Seven men
were hospitalized for smoke
inhalation during a fire in the 500
block of Main Street in Point
Pleasant Monday evef\ing which
gutted the Quik Clean Laundromat
causing an estimated $112,000
damage.
Cause of the fire which started
around 4.:30 p.m., apparently in the
rear of the building's first floor was
not Immediately known but Point
Pleasant Police Chief James
Gaskins and several firemen were
conducting an investigation early
this morning.
A fire department spokesman
said, however, the flames jwnped
into a false ceiling, before spreading
to the original ceiling and second
floor where firemen could not gain
access. After burning through the
building's tar covered roof, the fire
raged for seYeral hOW'S.
Thirty-six Point Pleasant
firefighters assisted by units from
Gallipolis, Valley and Mason battled
the blaze which was aided by brisk
winds untlllO p.m.
Damage to the structure which
housed not only a laundromat
owned by Lewis King of Hartford,
but an apartment as well, was
estimated at$75,000.
Damage to contents was set at
135,000.
Adjacent buildings housing a barber shop and clothing store were
spared fire damage but Ted
Wiseman of Haskins Tanner Men's
Ware said his stol'(' sustained ex·
tensive smoke damage .
Still being held fur observation,
but in stable condition at Pleasant
Valley Hospital are Poi nt Pleasant
firemen James Wood, 38; Alvin
Harris, 21; John Sallaz, 23; and C.M.
(Mike) Taylor, 22. Brant Queen, 23,
Rt. 2, Point Pleasant and Kenneth
Greenlee, 19, Point Pleasant, were
treated and released.
Roger Brandeberry, 24, Gallipolis
police officer, was treated at
Pleasant Valley and transferred to
the Holzer Medical Center where he
is listed in satisfactory condition for
smoke inhalation and eye irritation.

Wreck injures youth
A c~r driven by Brian Bauer, 18,
Middleport, struck a utility pole on
West Main St., Pomeroy, at 4:41
p.m. Monday.
Pomeroy Police said Bauer was
dJ:iving west when his steering wheel
locked causing the car to go out of
control. There were medium
damages to the car. Bauer was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was treated for
minor injuries and released.

·

FffiE SCENE - Seven men were taken to the
hospital fpr treatment of smoke inhalation during a fire
whicli struck tbe Quik Clean Laundromat on Main St,

In Point Pleasaot Monda y. Damages wer• set at
$112,000.

Mayor outlines village projects
By BOB HOEFUCH
year contract with the U. S. Corps of might be constructing a fence which
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Engineers on the Middleport Marina woulct" make it impossible for the
reported on the status of several and dW'ing the discussi on it was resident to properly mainta in his
projects when Middleport Village pointed out that the Corps has not property.
Council read a section of the Ohio
Council met in regular session Mon- funds for any dredging of Leading
day night.
.Creek. Mayor Hoffman did report, Code dealing with nuisances which
Mayor Hoffman reported that he howeYer, that the Corps has a ~ states that it is illegal to construct
has secured a six months option on program through which it offers fun- fences which prevent a neighbor
the Goeglein property in lower Mid- ds for development of recreational from carrying out property maindleport as approved by council two funds at such locat!ons as the tenan ce . Council adv ised the
weeks ago. The some four acres of marina.
resident that should erection of such
property would be used a8 a housing
Council approved the report of a fence start, tha t he should contact
area if federal funds for such a Mayor Hoffman showing receipts of the village solicitor.
Council di8cussed the condition of
project are forthcoming. The town $5288 in fines and fees for the month
a property at Lynn St., and Mayor
paid$! for the option,
of April.
Mayor Hoffman further stated
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck presen- Hoffman will contact the ~wner as to
that the application for $712,000 in ted a communication from Columbia condemnation proceedings. The conHUD funds-the first year funding of Gas of Ohio reporting thst gas costs dition of a couple of alleys was
several projects-has been filed. The in the town will be reduced by 11.18 discussed along with a property on
mayor announced that bids on the cents per 1,000 cubic feet from June N. Third where weeds have grown
Powell St. water line p~ject will be through August in conjunction with up. Proper corrective actions will
opened at 2:30p.m. Wednesday.
the uniform purchase gas ad- be taken .
Since the next regular meeting of justment clause.
Council agreed to become a
the council falls on Memorial Day,
Attending th e meeting were
council agreed to change to meeting management agency for the Ohio Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Buck, and
to Monday, May 18, and at that time EPA to continue to maintain water council members, Will iam Waiters,
it is hoped to award bids on the quality control In the community.
Dewey Hort9n, Jack Satterfield,
Powell St. project.
01\e resident appeared before MarYin Kelly, Allen Lee King and
The village entered into a five council and reported a neighbor Carl Horky.

National Hospital Week Is being
observed at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Veterans Memorial Hospital is a
70-bed non-profit acute 1 care inEitadecl Obfo Foneut- Thursday through Saturday : A chance of
stitution owned by Meigs County and
showers or thunderstorms Thursday and Friday. Fair. Saturday. ,
leased to the Velerans Memorial
Highs from the upper 60s to mid-70s Thursday and in the 60s Friday
Hospital of Meigs County Corand Saturday, Lows In the 40s and low 50s.
poration through the Meigs County
H~ital Commission, consisting fi
II members.
These members, appointed by the
Meigs .County Commi.!si~ers, iw
''
elude Hugh Custer, Russell CuUurns,
Ronald K. Ash has been named
Freeland Norris, Thomas Crow, Jr.,
area 111111111er for Ohio Power Co.'s
"'---~H~er~be~rt:..._~Shlelda, R. R. Pickens,
J'Cimeroy office. He auceeeda Fred
._
aughan, Gerald ThompMOI'I'VW, who retired May 1 after 43
son, George CoUins, George Carper,
years with the company, Including
and Owen Smith.
14 years u Pomeroy area manager.
There are nine board of trustee
A native o( Cantpn, Ash joined
'
memben who set the policies of the
Ohio Power Ill 1888'after receiving
hospltal and serve without pay. ·
hla bachelor's degree in huainess adThese members are John T. WoUe,
rnlnl.!lration from the University Of
' chairman; Andrew Cross ,
Akron. Prior to assuming his
secretary; Russell Brown, Hugh
cun:ent poslUon, he was a buyer in
Custer, Rex Shenefield; Clllrence
the Purchaalng and Stores Dept. of
Price, Harold Sauer, John R1ee and
the Clllllpll1y in Canton. Ash and his
Steven Story.
wife, Miry and four daughters and a
The hoepltal has 170 lull and part
son will relocate soon to the
time , employes, wlth an annual
Pomeroy area.
RONAW K. ASH
(Cmllnued on pqe8)
Clear tonight. Lows in the low 40s. Mostly sunny Wednesday. Highs
in the low 70s. Chance of raln near zero percent tonlght and 10 percent
Wednesday. Winds variable 10 mph or l.ess tonight.

Ash succeeds Morrow

We will DOl be opeD MOIL,
Mil)' !ltllla oblervaace ul
Memorial Day.

fB

retirement a; e auned at reversmg a
deC?des-long . trend and savmg
Soc1al Secunty more than $17 b1llion
between 198hnd1986.
.
About 1.6 nulhon workers retire on
Soc1alSecur1ty each year, and agency off1c1als say at least 60 percent
are under age 65.

Veterans Memorial observing hospital week

Weather

.

..... ,, ....

'

Winning Ohio lottery number

'

.

SEOUL, South Korea - Riot police firing tear gas today broke up an
anti-government demonstration by about 200 students on a Seoul
university campus.
ObserYers said police took at least 11 students into custody after
bringing the one-hoW' demonstration under control at Sung Kyun
Kwan University.
·
Slogan-shouting demon.,trators denounced President Chun [)oo.
hwan's goverrunenl and demanded the release of political prisoners.

. Election causes 'near panic'

.
n
.., . r

.

ATLANTA - A passing motorist found the body of a young black
male beside a rosd in a wooded area of suburban DeKalb County early
today, and pollee said the case was being considered a homicide.
"We believe it is related" to the slayings of 26 young Atlanta blacks
in the past 22 months, DeKalb County police spokesman Chuck Johnsonsald.
The body,•ws·covered between I a.m. and 2 a.m. EDT just east of
Atlanta, was "not decomposed at all" and appeared to have been there
only a few hours, he said.
Members of a special police task force inYestigating the slayings of
26 young Atlanta blacks and the disappearance of a black child rushed
to the scene, officials said.

WASHINGTON- Ted Turner's Cable News Network has filed suit
in U.S. District Court in Atlanta against the White House and the three
. major TV networks in an effort to get its cameras admitted to
presidential news pools.
Depending on circumstances, the White House periodically restricts
tbe nwnber Qf cameras which can be close to the president. There are
two types of camera pools - expanded and tight.
In expanded pools, the major networks - ABC, NBC and CBS- as
well liB other TV reporters are allowed to cover the president's
movements.

,------------lo....----------------------

Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled
American Veterans, will meet at
6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the chapter
home on Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy.

Another body found .in Atlanta

Turner sues White House

Visit Our Camera Department
On The First Floor

at y

press secretary Larry ~peakes sa1d
Reagan would honor his pledge. not
to reduce Social Secunty penstons
for those already retired. .
The ·adrnimstratron also rs repor;
tedly .cons1dermg cuts m survivors
benef1ts for w1d~ws and ot~r
economy measures m the $140 billion
Social Security program, which
could run out of cash m late 1982 or m
1983.
.
The proposed penalties for early

Fire loss
set at
$112,000

COLUMBUS, Ohio - No one seems to know what happened to
$2,007,260.34 the fedel"l}l government gave to the state back in 1836.
It ivas part of $28 million in excess funds the U.S. Treasw-y
distributed to the 26 states in the Union at the time. There was only one
hitch - if the government ever needed the money, the states had to
pay up.
Officials in the state treasurer's and auditor's office and in the state
Office of Budget and Management profess ignorance of the cash.

•Clear, sharp color prints or slides.
• Reliable, easy, no settings to·make.
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•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday,

What happened to federal funds ?

IDEAL GRADUATION GIFT

a 7.05 percent_payroll tax scheduled
to take effect m 1985 would be pared
somewhat and taxes would be
reduced from curreqt 6.65 percent
levels by 1:'00.
- Delaymg for ~ee months the
July 1982 cost~·livmg. a.dlustm~nt
for the nail~ ~ 36 million Soc18l
Securl~ybeneflclalies to save a~ut
$4.5 billion..The 11.2 percent mcrease due this July wOUld not be affected, and deputy White House

../

Vot.30,No.l9
Copyrighted 1981

~~:~~~!r~~~~ Meigs County happenings
bus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
were without service for over nine Wednesday banquet
hours Sunday as the result of an acA mother-daughter banquet will
cident on Pomeroy's West Main St.
be
held in the annex of the Syracuse
Pomeroy Police said that a westbound car driven by Britt Dodson, Presbyterian Church Wednesday at
18, Mid&lt;\leport, struck and knocked 6:30p.m.
Persons attending are to bring a
over a utility pole near the Legar
covered
dish. Meat, rolls and
Monument Co., and then went on to
beverage
will
be provided. A short
strike a parked car owned by Rebecprogram
will
be
held following the
ca Triplett, Pomeroy. Police said
dinner.
that Dodson fell asleep at the wheel
and that he has been cited on
reckless operation charges. The ac- Veterans Memorial
cident occurred at 7 a.m. and power
Saturday Admissions--Lois
was not restored until about 4: 15 Hawley, Pomeroy; Judy Smith, Vinp.m.
ton; Kathryn Cremeans, Coolville;
Bertha Diehl, Pomeroy.
Saturday
Discharges--Betty
Mankin, Sharon Jones, Amanda
Savage, Mary Spencer, Odell Blake.
Sunday Admissions--Douglas
Rees, Syracuse; Stephen Lavalley,
Racine; LyM Kloes, Middleport;
Myrl Roberts, Pomeroy; Eunice
Nutter, Reedsville; Lula Mw-ray,
Middleport; James Turley,
Pomeroy.
Local emergency units were kept
Sunday Discharges-Eileen Smith,
on the move answering calls on the
Paula
Good, Judy Smith.
weekend, the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services reports.

- Abolishing limits on how much
people between the ages of65 and 72
can earn without losing benefits.
- Keeping the minimwn age for
full benefits at 65, instead of 68 as
proposed by the House Ways and
Means subcommittee oo Social
Security.
-Lowering Social Security tax
rates on 114 million workers now
paying into the system. Although no
figures were available, sources said

,, .

I

STAFF- Pletared he lOUie tl the medleal Iliff RJdlway, Dr. WDma Ml_,leld, Dr. r-Ia Dayo;
memben .111 Veter.. MeiiiOrial HGIPital. Tbey IJt. bact, Ito r, Dr. E. 8. \TiDilllmJ, Dr. SeUm J11uewk1,
IW!e, front, ! to r, Dr. rbomu Mrilowau, Dr. Jalul ·Dr• .lamM WltbeftU, Dr. Antoalo Sola, Dr. Mate O.yo
and Dr. Jolla BraWlier.

�•

Commentary
I

Tuesday. May 12, 1981

CooDey destroys Ken Norton

Pag-2-The Daily Sentinel'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio'
Tuesdav, May 12, 1981

NEW YORK (AP) - At this rate
we may never find out if Ger.;
Cooney can take a punch.
Ken Norton landed precious few of
them on the undefeated 24-year-old
heavyweight before Cooney
.destroyed him in the first round of ,
their scheduled 10-round ;

Better times for the Navyl(__·_________J._am_e_sJ._.'_K_ilp....:..a·tr_ic_k
WASHINGTON - I have just
made a definitive count. In this city
of skeptics, debunkers and doubting
Thomases, how many unquenchable, bright-side optimists may be
found' The answer is two. One of
them, of course, is the president.
The other is the secretary of the
Navy.
You have met Mr. Reagan. Now
meet John F. Letunan Jr. The gentleman is gung ho. He is full speed
ahead. He never served in the
Seabees, but he is the walking embodiment of their fmaous motto:
Can do! All in one confident breth,
he proposes to restore at least one
battleship, to win additional pay
raises, to improve fringe benefits, to
open new avenues for promotion of
petty officers, and to plot a course
that will bring us a 600 ship Navy by
!991. He has some other happy
thoughts, too.
Encountering Secretary Letunan
is like encountering a swmy day in

May. Over on Capitol Hill, it's
raining all the time. There th~ talk is
mostly of things that can',t be done,
of·savings that can't be made, of
budgets that can't be balanced, of
bills that can't be passed. Mr. Lehman is only 38. He isn't old enough to
take the jaded view.
During the Nixon and Ford administra(ions, this cheerful fellow
served in various capacities !.laving
to do witp foreign affairs and
national defense. For a time he was
counsel and senior staff member to
Henry KiBsinger and the National
Security Council. He brings to his
duties both a broad general
education (St. Joseph's College,
Cambridge University, a Ph.D. from
the University of Pennsylvania) and
a body of specialized experience in
strategy and weapons.
Just reading the papers, you
might wonder that Mr. Letunan finds much in the Navy to be happy
about. After all, over the past

The Dai Iy Sentinel
Ill r uurt Strrt•l

Pumt·ro)', Ohio
614-99 2-Zls&amp;
DF.I"IlTEIJ TO TilE INTEREST Of TilE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

decade his fleet has been clit in half
while its obligations have roughly
doubled. The Navy is short some
20,000 petty officers and junior officers. In 1980 the rate of' attrition
was plainly appalling .. Because of
long extended tours of sea duty,
morale has been slwnping. Mean·
while, the Soviet navy grows and
grows and grows.
In light of all this, why is this man
smiling' Since the first of this year,
Mr. Letunan observes, things have
begun to look up. In 1979 the reenlisiment rate for first-termers
was 38 percent. Now the rate is up to
44 percent. In 1979, only 45 percent of
the second-termers were signing on
for a third term. Now that rate has
increased to 59 percent. "The trends
are all in the right direction," he
says. For the past 17 months in a
row, the Navy has met its recruiting
goals. More than three-fourthS of
these fresh-caught seamen have
high school diplomas. "The quality
is good."
Suppose Congress goes along with
the proposal to take the New Jersey
out of mothballs. Could the old battleship be manned' First off, says
the secretary, the New Jersey iBn't
"old" by naval standards; she's actually had only 13.7 years of commissioned service. Since the first announcement of a possible activation,
hundreds of former battleship
sailors have volunteered to return to
their old assignments. Finding I ,500
men to crew the New Jersey, says
the secretary, would be no trick at
all.

Mr. Letunan's guess is that New
Jersey could be returned to service
within three years, having been
refitted with modern missiles and
other weapons systems, for perhaps
$326 milion. On today's naval
market, that's a bargain. Her sister
ships, Missouri, Iowa and Wisconsin, present greater problems of
restoration ; they are not out of the
picture but they're not much In It,
either.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ships are one big concern. The
greater concern, in the secresailors who had dropped out of 1he
view, is the morale of the mer Navy maybe moved to return.ln the
year's pay raise, effecthpast six months, 5,815_old salts have
January, has helped. Anothm To a skeptical newinnah, all this
of 5.3 percent, requested fo sounds a little too good to be true.
swruner, will keep re-enlli Navy life is still rou~ on Navy
trends moving. A3 tbe fleet ex wives, and it wllllllke f1ve yean to
and manpower needs are m~ expand the navy from 472
Navy can move toward Its old 1deployable ships to 543. But If 0[1time practice of one month 1 timisin can fuel a fleet, Mr. Lelunan
for every two mnths at sea. ! will have them running at 40 knots in
tirrte.

heavyweight fight at Madison
SQuare Garden Monday night.
Cooney spent just 54 seconds doing'
away with Norton, tearing into the
former World Boxing Council champion with a savage, devastating
shower of punches. The end came
with Norton slwnped in his own cor-

:-.'rws Ed ilur
A ~1E/\18ER ul The A~soc lat t&gt;d Prr ~s. Inland Dal h· Prrss Assoc·latlon and the
·\ mrrit 'Hn .' i t' \4 spapt•r Pu bli~ hr rs Asstldatitt n.
·

•

...

'

~ 'DWX~TIC ALTERHA11Yt

IJTTF:RS OF t~PI\'10'1,; 11no " l'lrum t' d. Tht· ~· shttu ld lw lt'u th11n 300 1o0.nrds lnnK. Al l
suhjt•fl to t·dilin~ and mu st ht• si~ tlt'd \4Ith IUimt', addrrss l:lnd lrll'phollt'
mtm ht•r. \'1 1 um i,I(Dt•d lt• nt•r• "Ill ht' publl~h t•d . l .t'tlt· r ~to shnuld ht• In ,l(nnd tush•. addrrssln,l(
l rth · r~ Hh'

t•• Ur •. ll tt\ pt• r''' l lalilit· ~ .

Post-graduate
problem
You've probably already heard plenty about declining enrollment,
rismg tuition a nd deteriorating academic standards.
But in case you think that is all there is to the problems of higher
education these day s and are beginnmg to relax, don 't. There's more, at
least on some campuses.
It has to do with the football spectacles that are the big thing during the
fall term. No, not illegal player recruiting or ticket gougi ng for the Big
Games, but a disturbing trend in the elaborate half-time shows presented by
the big-time marching bands.
This has been, it appears, toward less music and more bad taste. And a
real surprise is where the problem is most pressing. Not the rah-rah Midwest or raucous Southwest where it's not so much a case of football fans as
fa natics. but in the elite of the elite, the Northeast's Ivy League.
The shows have taken an increasingly topical turn, often relying upon
sharpl y pointed satire and sexual insinuation to make points, according to
theNewYork Tun es in a ecent and characteristically thorough report on the
situation .
The band from normally non-boisterous Brown, for example, entertained the crowd on a visit to Colwnbia with a salute to New York
featuring simulated muggings. On a visit to Holy Cross, it made light work of
the saga of a little Polish boy who grew up to become pope.
Meanwhile, over in New Haven the Yale band on one occasion stopped
the show but not the television cameras with a routine in which the members
simultaneously dropped their pants to reveal diapers. Big laugh.
There are other and in some cases more questionable examples from
Princeton , Harva rd and the like. The result has been complaints from offcampus spectators, including influential alwnni, and a decision by the Ivy
administrations tu warn the bands to clean up their acts before this fall 's
season openers.
The attitude on the campuses on the matter appears to be ambivalent.
As one Yale student observed, it depends upon what the purpose of the football ritual is perceived to be. If the games and attendant activities are seen
as primarily a student interest, then let the students have their fun,
sophomoric as it may be. But if college football's primary audience is the
adult community and alumni, it's another matter. The spectacles should be
tailored to their less pennissive tastes.
He has a point - and possibly even an answer to the schools' problem.
Maybe they could get off the alwnni book by calling the football shows continuin~ education.

Today in history. . •
Today is Tuesday, May 12, the 132nd day of 1981. There are 233 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
,
On May 12, 1949, the Berlin blockade ended lis the Soviels·announced
the reopening of East Gennan land routes that had been closed nearly
one year earlier in a vain attempt to isolate West Berlin.
On this date:
In 1820, the founder of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale, was born
in Florence, Italy.
In 1932, the body of the kidnapped son of Charles Lindbergh'was found
in a wood in Hopewell, N.J.
And in 1965, West Gennany established diplomatic relations with
Israel.
Ten years ago: The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York announced it had paid $5.5 mlllion for a painting by the Spanish artist
Velazquez.
Five years ago: Islamic Jlittiollll convened in Istanbul, Turkey, to
discuss Palestinian and Cypriot problems.
One year ago: Maxie AncJeracn and hia son COlllpleted the first transcontinental balloon flight When their craft floated down In Quebec's
Gaspe Peninsula after 100 hour! in the air.
Today's birthdays: · ~r Bert Bacharach is 52 years old.
Comedian George Carlin is 4l And baseball great Yogi Berra is 56.
Thought rot today: Goodnesjl is the only investment that never fails.Henry Davi~Thoreau, writer (1817-1862).

Children offer energy suggestions
WASHINGTON (AP ) - House
Majority Leader Jim Wright, who
often talks about Amjlrica's need to
be energy independent again, is getting some novel advice from unusual
sources.
The Texas Democrat told the
National Press Club recently about
energy suggestions from several
children who wrote Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif.
"One of those suggestions was that
kids ought to help out around filling
stations on weekends and free up the
other people to go look for more oil,"
Wright said.
,
"The second youngster opined
that it would be a good idea to
require any American who went to

any country that had any oil to bring
back a bottle full of it.
"And the third suggested find out
if oil is known by any other name
and look for it under that name."
WASHINGTON (AP) - About 75
reporters and lobbyists thought they
were in for a treat at an earlymorning session of the House Small
Business Committee last week.
Rep. Parren J . Mitchell, J).Md.,
told the group: "I suggest you all
now have coffee and donuts."
But as everyone looked for a table
laden with goodies, Mitchell quickly
added: "You can buy your own in
the cafeteria downstairs."
WASHINGTON (AP)- Everyone

knows you couldn't get the same answer from two economists If you had
a room full of them.
But sometimes that's not all bad.
And an example of one benefit
came during a Senate Banking Committee meeting during the usual
argwnent over whose economic
projections were the most valid.
Sen. Aifonse D' Amato, R·N.Y.,
finally broke up the diBpute with an
unusually candid admission on why
he was advocating the
Congressional Budget . Office's
position.
"I'm using the CBO figures
because they're most favorable to
my case," he said.

WASHINGTON (APJ - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, he of the unfullilled presi(Iential ambltiollll, lan't
saying anything bad about
Secretary pf State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. these days.
In an oblique reference to Halg
declaring hlmBelf In control at the
White Hou:*l fo)\owlng the shooting
of President:.~ ;Jil,agan, the
Massachuse,tts uemocrat told a
group of education. lobbyists recently:
"I don't want to say anything
rough about AI Halg. He's drawing
up another order of succession to the
presidency and I'm trying to get my
name on that last list."

F1JRJOUS ONSLAUGHT - Unbeaten heavyweight boxer Gerry
Cooney follows through on a savage p)lnch to the head of Ken Norton
during first round acllon In their fight at New York's Madison Square
Garden Monday night. Cooney stopped the former World Boxing Council
heavyweight cbaDiplon in the first 54 seconds of a scheduled !!).round
fight. (AP Laserplfoto 1.

Owners-players
still far apart

costly for some small businesses to
adjust to. And forgets them.
Forgets that the country isn't
made up only of big govenunent, big
.business and big unions, but of
millions of small companies
providlng scores of millions of jobs
in many thousands of communities.
The latest flap came last week at
Senate hearings on proposed new
standards defining the size of small
businesses eligible for federal
programs, mainly those of the Small
Business Administration.
One proposal seemed innocuous.
In the future, said the SBA, it would
like to establish a single standard for

determining what constituted a
small business. It would be based on
the number of employees.
But nothing is quite that simple in
dealing with the bureaucracy .
The SBA said that to be fair the
standard should vary from industry
~o industry, depending on the level of
competition. A four-digit code based
on the Standard Industrial
Classification system would· deter·
mine Jl" industry's competitiveness,
and • that would mean a small
business might range from just 15 to
as many ~s 2,500 employees.
Some small business owners and
organizatiollll were outraged at the

proposal, which the SBA aaid would
be more rational ai *ell .- simpler
than the "mJsb.mash" of criteria
developed since the 19508.
Small business is exceedingly difficult to define, and 110me people who
have spent years dealing with what
they say are small busine88 matters
have very flexibile definitions.
Dozens of definitiOllll exist that are
based on the number of employees
and sales, such as that offered by the
Walter E. Heller Institute, which
states that a small busine88 Is one
with annual sales between $1 million
and $50 million and 50 to 500 employees.

Politics and the. computer___A_rt_B_uc_hw;,;,;..;,a,;,..;.;.ld
If you want to know who iB going to

take over American politics in the
near future , it's not a person, but a
computer. The computer is located
in Virginia.
It has a memory bank filled with
millions of names of people, who can
be tappeHor millions of dollars to
defeat anybody who doesn't go along
with its ultra-conservative ideology.
By sheer luck I managed to tap in
to the computer and get an exclusive
interview.
"Is it true, sir, that you have a hit
list of congressmen and senators
who don 't vote the way you want
them to?"
"That is correct," the computer
types out. "Do you have any names
you want me to add to the list?''
"Not at the moment. But If I think
of any I'll let you knoW."
"You do that. Money's no object
when it comes to zapping my
enemies."
"I guess you're one of the most ,
powerful computers in Amerilta," I .

!'HOR'E.AND SWEET- Unbeaten heavyweight boxer Gerry Cooney
smashes a right to Ken Norton during first round action in their fight at
New York's MadiBon Square Garden Monday night. Cooney stopped the
former World Boxlog Council heavyweight champion in the first 54 seconds of a scheduled !I). round fight. lAP Laserphoto) .

typed. "How do you operate?"
"In different ways. I can remember every vote of every politician In
America. When I decide he isn't one
of us, I start sending out letters to his
constituents, telling them what a rotten nlrgoodnik he really iB."
"And that does him In?"
"No, that's just a letter asking for
money to defeat him In the next election."
"So peop/e send you checkll?"
"You wwl~dn't believe it. I can
write a let r that can scare the hell
out of anyo e in this country."
"Could you give me an example of
how you dolt '"
"Well, let's say a senator voted for
the Panama Canal Treaty. I have
the name and address of every
Panama Canal lover In his state. I'll
spit out 100,1)00 letters in three hours
warning Wpeople if they don 'I send
in a check, the senator plans to give
Alaska back to the Russiallll."
"And If ~t doesn't bring in

enough money ?"
"Then I'll send out another letter
saying the senator wants to take God
out of the schools." .
"You're really a hardball computer," I said with admiration.
"The big money-getters are the
letters I write about politicians who
are pro-abortion, pro-ERA or prohandgun control. When our people
get one of those letters, they start
writing out their checkll before they
get to the 5eCOild paragrap~ ."
"So you get a windfall of money
when you send out the letters? What
do you do next?"
"Then I go Into my second
program, which iB to allot the money
for a vicious media campaign against the person on my hit list." '
"I didn't know you were programmed for that."
"What kind of dwnb computer do
you think I am? I can program
television commercials, newspaper
ads, and even word-of-mouth campaigns, The trick is to hit my man

.---------..

below the belt and let him scream
'Foul.' I can portray my target as
anti-family, soft on Conununism, a
socialist free-spender and trilaterallst, all in a a.second commercial."
"It's the old political dirty trick ·
game
with
electronic
sopbistlcati&lt;in."
"I don't care what you call it. It
does the job.''

'· .

·Panthers oust Meigs

"I guess in the next election you'll
be calling all the shots."
"I'm not waiting for the next election. I have to,ralse the money right
now. There are a lot of people wbo
better shape up or they're going to
find themselves out cin their ears In
1982."
"Let me ask you one more question. Do you ever think about
how much damage you ·might be :
doing to the American democratic
system?"
"
"I don't. think. I just follow orders."
.'

. ,_

'

...' '
'

-~------~--~~~-·w\__ --~~~--------

-

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~--~

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./

BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

W

L

15
18

St.Louis
Philadelphia

Montreal

Pilt.lbU'l!h

7
10

17

lO

11

12

8

16

NewYcrk
Chicaj,lO

5 )9

WEST
:Ill

I.D!il Angeles
Atlanta
Cincinnati
San Franclaeo

j

"'

.

1lle Meigs' Amerlcani Legion
baseball team will hall8! slg~~-up day,
Saturday, May 16 at II a.m. at the
Meigs High School Fleld. All boys
are to bring their birth certificate,
baU gloves, and shoes'. All boys that
played on last year's team are to
brine old unllorms.
•

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ALL SEArS JUST S !.SO

ADMISSiON EVERY TUESDAY $ !. 50

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101&gt;

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10 innini'
Cincinnati 0

Tutsday'1 Games

(Hlul.s 2·1) , I n)

,.

~atUe (Bannister ~1) at Detroll (Wilcox 4-21 (nl
Cleveland ( W~ti ts 3-1) at Chicago (Trout
HI. (nl
-•
Callfornia (Forsch 4-1 ) at Mil wauk ee

Texas

(Matlack . 1'·21 at Ka rwas City
!Leonard 2-4 ), &gt;nt
Bostoo 11\ldor 1-IJ at MIMesot.a (Erick-

Oakland at New York, (n)
Seattle at Detroit, (n}
' California at Milw1llkee, (n)
Cleveland at Chicago, (n)
Boston at Mlnne!ot&amp; , (n)
Texas at Kansas City, (n}

13

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9
WEST

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itt\lict
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THE END OI'THE UNE
IN CUTTING TOOLS.

Pd. GB
.138
.500
4211

IF YOUR INSURANCE
IS ADEQUATE.

STIHL BRUSHCUTTERS.

Mootreol at Los Angees, (n)

-

Toronto

Hl at New York

New York at San D1~0, (n)

.167
.113
.171

at

BaltimOft at Toronto, (n )

at Atlanta
Chicago !Mart• Hi al Cincinnati ISoto
1 ~ 1 . In)
:
SI.Lwis lf•11eh Hi ; HO\L!IIIl IKnepper 3-&lt;li. In)
.
New Yori ~·~ry ~~ 111 San Diego
IEichelhelg"' II' i'll' '
M&lt;J&gt;t~l It.B ia '2-Ji 111 u. Angel..,
~ , )n)
. IHoolon
Rhilad~lph la
(Espinosa 1·21 at San
Fn!ncisco !Aieunder 4-2), 1n1
· ' Wedonday'•
Gom.,
Phi(adelphla
ot San Fra ncisco
/ Pituburgh al AU.nu. , In/
Chicago al Cincinnati , In/
St.LouJs at Houston, (n)

14
7
14 lO
Yor k16 .12
14 12

\.() )

Wcd.Dettil)"l Gamn

S,
Only gaiTieS sc heduled
ToeodoJ'•G•m"
PiU•burgh
(Solomon ~l i
[Niekro H ), (nJ

W L

(Palmer

(Stieb 2-J ), (nl
Oakland ILangron:t
!GIIidry HI, '(nl

son l-3), {n}

Atlanta J, Pit~burgh ~

Howton

Boston 7, Toroato 5
ClcveLIDd 1, Cbltago I
Tna1 t , Ka111111 City 1
OD.ly games scMduled
Baltimore

J

TO LEARN

Moncby '•Gamtt

9
13
II

16
14
15

MINUTE

Howton

The New . lexington P'"thers ' daugh helped his own cause with a aevewnd
rolled to a 4-1 win over Meigs at towering two-run . home run that Ballil"""'
New
provided
the
winning
margin.
Meigs
MUwaukee
1__....,.;,;:r;::i;; ~~~~~~~~the Class - addell'a'single ·run in-the fourth, but = t
tly.
Lextngton ~now 8-12, while couldn't crank ill!t .any more offense,' ,Toronlj) . ,
· Oaklond
M'lgs drops to 7-9. New Lexington the entire game.
.wDl f~ Belpre In the sectional
New Lexington added two in- Texas
Chicago I
finala tonight at Athens.
surance runs in the sixth frame, but Calllomia
A healed · pitchers duel between didn't need any more as they MJnnesola
Seattle
Brian Middaugh and Jeff Wayland coasted to the 4-1 victory.
Kansas City
ol Meigs lleveloped early in the conle!t and despite several key hits by
New Lei:', the pitching duel stayed
in lad to the linal out Middaugh
weqt the distance for the Panthers,
outduellnll Wayland, as both surrendered just four hitil.
The cllncliing blow of the game
came In the fourth Inning when Mid-

Legion sign-up set
.

BARGAIN IM11NEfS

DON'T WAIT UNTIL
THE LAST

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531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt. 35 WEST
Phone 446- 4524

'~

I' "

AMERICAN LEAGUE

•

,,

By Associated Press
Blue Jays 743 . Just two games were runs last year as a rookie, slammed
The Kansas City Royals, having played In the National League, the his first this season, a tie-breaking
lost 16 of 22 meetings with other Houston A:ltros blanking the Cin- tw{}-run shot in the seventh inning.
American League teams and at their cinnati Reds 5-0 and the Atlanta Bert Biyleven picked up his fourth
lowest point in nine years, hope their Braves nipping · the Pittsburgh consecutive victory and aiBo posted
latest meeting may turn things Pirates 3-2 in 10 innings.
his fourth complete game, yielding
around.
Bwnp Wills rapped four hits and four hits while striking out nine .
Catcher Jerry Grote called a drove in three runs to lead Texas
Charboneau, who brought a .158
players-only meeting Monday night over the Royals, who have lost four batting average into the game, said
following the Royals' 9-1 loss .to the games in a row. The Rangers got he is not concerned about a
Texas Rangers. The setback was the startecj with three runs in the third sophomore jinx. "I'd never hea rd of
Royals' ninth in 11 home games and inning off Larry Gura, two coming it before," he said. "I'm not worried
dropped them 10 games below .500 home on a double by Buddy Bell. ,about home run• . I want to hit for
for the first time since June 1972. Wills singled a run home and scored average. The home runs will come. I
The defending American League in the fifth inning and added an RBI just want to get my average up."
champs are last in the West single in the sixth and an RBI double
Red Sox 7, Blue Jays 6
DiviBion, 13t games behind the in the eighth.
Gary Allenson drove in five runs
pacesetting Oakland A's.
"I understand the frustration with a pair of singles and a double
"What was said in the meeting they're going through," Wills said of and Rick Miller tied a maj or league
· was for the players, not lor the the Royals' slwnp. "I've been there, record with four doubles to pace
press," Grote said. But shortstop being with the Texas Rangers for Boston to its' fifth straight victory.
U.L. Washington called the session five years."
Miller and Allenson hit consecutive
"a pretty good idea. It wasn't yelling
"They're struggling right now," doubles to produce the winning run
- it was to shake us up, get us said Texas Manager Don Zimmer. with two out in the ninth inning.
together. Just calling the meeting "But I guarantee you one thing Miller also had a single in a 5,-for-5
was something that needed to be somebody will pay for it."
game. Jorge Bell and Willie Upshaw
done. The point was to get
" We haven't really had someone homered for Toronto,' which has
11 t B t
.
everybody pulling together. But it get hot with the bats in terms of dro pped fOUrlllarOW
,a 0 OSOn.
was too short a meeting to get it all RBis," said Kansas City Manager
Astros 5, Reds 0
off our chests. That would have .Jim Frey. "Eleven RBis (Amos
Nolan Ryan struck out 11 batters,
taken a couple of hours."
Otis) is leading the team, and that the 133rd time he has whiffed 10 or
In the only other AL games, the shows no one has been hot driving in moreinagame, andJoseCruzslam·
Cleveland Indians downed the
. Indians 3, White So~ I
Houston.
Chicago White Sox 3-1 and the runs"
Boston Red Sox edged the Toronto
Joe Charboneau, who hit 23 home

rJm~ed~~a~~::o-:ru:n~h:o:m:e~r_t:o~p:ac:eJl~~~'~"~'~'~""~-M~'~'~"~''~'~''~'~'~'~s~

NEW YORK (AP)- Doug DeCin- "Has · anyone among the owners
ces swruned up the progress of talks reassessed the need for what they
aimed at averting a major-league are demanding' "
baseball strike with the same
"We still have a long way to go,"
SliiOOthness he displays around third said DeCinces.
base !or the Baltimore.Orioles.
· What the owners want iB colnpensation for certain free agents lost
"There,lja~ lillY movement
on anythll\£, 1!~. the maj or- in the re-entry draft, the only issue
league player·representative, said unresolved 'last spring when a lastafter a two-hour bargaining session minute compromise averted a
strike.
with a federlil mediator Monday.
The two primary negotiators Apanel of players and owners was
Ray G.l'jlbeY for the owners and Mar- then unable to reach agreement on
vin MiUer for the pl~yers - were the issue and, on Feb.!9, the owners
less blwit. But neither was declaring unilaterally irr.plemented their com\hjlt ba3ebalrs second players strike pensation pla~ . Ten days later, the
in nine years, threatened for May 29, · ' players said they would strike.
Could be a_voided. ·
The owners say soaring free-agent
n
Grebey; director of the Player salaries will leave them bankrupt.
Rela:IQllll . Conunlttee, said ' the They want compensation in the fonn
session in• his office had been "a of a roster player if they lose a topgood meeting" but declined to be line perfonner to free-agency.
specific.
Since the free-agent bonanza starAsked if anything could be ted in the mid-1970s, the only corn,
isswned from the length of the first pensation a club has received for
losing a free agent has been a pick in
ne~liD&amp;- llfSSiOil. in two weeks,
the
annual amateur draft.
Grebey replied: "You can draw
whatever conclusions you like!'
The players argue that any cornMiller, executive director of the pensation other thsn the amateurMajor ·League Baseball Players draft pick would cut down on the
Association, said only that the two freedom of movemen t th.ey won in
sides would meet again whenever previous contract negotiations.
• un1on
· f'led
1
Le st week, the Payers
called by Kenneth Moffett, the
I
federal mediator. Moffett gave no unfair-labor charges against the
· them of faij mg
'
to,
indication when the next session owner~, accusmg
turn over infonnatlon about their
would be held.
Earlier, Grebey had said he was balbcl u.bs' f'mances.. The P111yers say
"not optimistic" about averting a theY need the data to determine if
are valid •
walkout, and Miller had ~~ed: !he owners' arRwnents
.

Celebrate U.S. Small Business Week
NEW YORK (AP )- Because of a
burea ucratic compulsion to
designate if not dedicate each week
as something or other, we now
celebrate U.S. Small Business Week,
per order of the President of the
United States.
Oddly, the celebration for the
sma ll business free-enterprisers iB
largely an affair of government,
which many sma ll business people
have long contended has been and
maybe still is the nwnber one
enemy.
.
The enemy because of the way it
taxes them, regulates them and
writes contract rules that big companies can handle but which are too

jaw, a straight "nght ~ ' he said.
"Then I dropped down to the body
and caught him inside with two punChes."
'
The lefts to the body left Norton
grimacing, crouched in his corner.
"I heard him gasp," Cooney said.
That's when he moved in for the kill,
drilling Norton with six straight punches to the head.
"I got a little frightened," Cooney
said. " I was hitting him and he was
unconscious. I was afraid I might
hurt him."
. As Norton slumped under the
storm of blows, referee Perez moved
in arid signalled the end of the fight.
Later, the former champion reflected on what had happened.
''It's self-explanatory,'' he said. '' I
did not expect Gerry to come out
that quick. He hit harder than I
thought he would and quicker than I
thought he would. He surprised me
with everything he did. I just didn't
expect it. He's a very talented
fighter.' '

Royals, Reds continue to flounder

A1&lt;11&lt;1i•Lanl Puhli slu·r ll'o ntrullt'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

ner as referee Tony Perez waved
Cooney away.
It ·was the 25th consecutive victory
for the youngster from Huntington,
N.Y., and set the stage for an almost
certain WBC title shot against Mike
Weaver. And promotor Don King
was a ringside letting it be known
that Cooney, the No. I ranked contender in both boxing divisions,
could have a fight with Larry
Holmes for the World Boxing Council version of the title.
For Norton, listed as 35 years old,
it could mean the end of his career,
once and for all.
Ironically, the quick knockout"
came four years to the night after
Norton had devastated Duane
Bobick in the same Garden ring.
That fight took 58 seconds but
Cooney was finished four seconds
faster. The end came so quickly that
Cooney remembered almost
everything that happened in the
fight.
"I hit him with a right hand to the

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Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

1981

Tuesday, May 12, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

Community Corner
This is National Nursing Home
Week and the staff at the Pomery
· Health Care Center extends a
special invitation
to you to visit
their faciljty.
An open house
will be held Wednesday from I to 7
p.m. with tours, a
buffet din ner
prepared by the
regular kitchen
CHARLENE
employes for
donation, and entertainment.
From 2 to 3 p.m. there will be
music by Ed Hatkless' vocal groups
from Meigs High &amp;hool and some
corrunents from Kermit Walton, and
from 4 to 5, the musical Robinsons of
Middleport, (Rev. Robert and Joan )
will entertain.

a

Something new at the Middleport
library!
Starting Thursday, the Middleport
Public library will not only be lending books, but also educational
toys. The new program will be
initiated Thursday at I p.m. when
Patty Asbeck conducts a program
on toys, their role in teachiog coordination, identification of shape and
·color, and selection:
This is another of OVAL's
program under a taxpayer's grant.
About 100 toys will be available at
the Middleport library and parents
will be able to check them out two

To graduate soon

per child for four week periods.
It's too late for Mother's Day, but,
perhaps for Father's Day you might
like to send a singing telegram to the
man in your life. Western Union is
delivering anywhere in the country.
Not only do they convey the
message at the sender's chosen
hour, but a '\"'iter creates a lyric
especially for the individual - at a
price, of course. A keepsake plaque
is'then sent.
Western Union also can arrange
personal delivery by a courier in top
hat and tails. The cost is $21 for
telephone delivery, and from $40 for
courier presentation.
The waUs of the Pomeroy Elemimtary School this week are beautiful.
They're covered with art work completed by the young&amp;ters under the
direction of the talented elementary
art teacher, Debbie Hill.
David Ballard, a sophomore at
Easte, recently visited with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Baker and son, Kevin.
The Bakers of Killbuck, Ohio, own
a home in Cleremont, Fla. A
highlight of David's vacation was
seeing the lunching of the space
shuttle, Columbia. He and his
relatives visited Disney World,
Cyprus Gardens and Sea World
along with many other places during
his stay .

MASON ....: Mr. and Mrs. William
Van Meter of MasoA wiSh to annou.~re the
· graduation
of their daughter,
Cheryl Lynn Van
Meter on May 24
at 2:30 p.'m. from
the 198) ClaSs of
Alderson Broaddus College at
Philippi, W. Va.
Miss Van Meter
will receive her
CHERYL
BA Degree in elementary education,
majoring in Special Education concentrating with Mentally Handicapped.

Attend Church
MASON - The Mason Extensiol\
Homemakers attended the Hartford
Baptist Church in a group on Sun·
day, May 3 during Mason
Homemakers Week.
Attending were Mrs. Lea Belcher,
Mrs. Clara Williams, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, Mrs. Catherine Smith, Mrs.
Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mrs. Gloria
Chapman, Mrs. Hazel Smith and
Mrs. Ramona Sydenstricker.

Mothers honored
MASON - F1owers were presented at Mason United Methodist Church to the youngest mother, Mrs. Lisa
Crump; eldest mother, ·Mrs. Clara
Roush and to the mothers with the
most children present on Sunday,
May 10, and due to a tie the recipients were Mrs. Helen Barton, with four
children present and Mrs. Helen
Johnson, four children.
· The Rev. Ben Stevens, pastor of
Mason United Methodist Church,
presented the flowers to the above
mentioned mothers and delivered
the message, " Motherhood in
Calvary."

Mason, area personals
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Gibbs, Hartford,
Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mason, Mrs.
Charles Proffitt and Mrs. Eugene
Sterrett, Pt. Pleasant, of the Colonel
Charles Lewis Chapter were among
the 43 persons who attended the

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cundiff entertained with a picnic Sunday at
their Syracuse home to honor their
son, Tom, his wife, Sornmai, and
their two sons, John and Joe.
Tom, who has been stationed with
the U. S. Air Force in Panama City,
Fla., is being transerred to Guam,
and will be accompanied there by
his family.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Cundiff, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Cundiff, Jr., daughter ,
Melody, and son, Scott Taylor, Mr.

Celebrates 1st birthday
Christopher Adam Buchanan
celebrated his first birthday recently at the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Buchanan of Reedsville.
He was presented with two cakes,
one a cookie monster theme baked
by his grandmother, Mrs. Doris
Buchanan, and the other a puppy
replica baked by an aunt, Betsy
Hawtheme.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Attending besides his
parents were his grandmother, Mrs.
Buchanan and Sherri, Beverly
Buchanan and Billena, Sandra
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Frank RifOe,
also grandparents, Brenda and
Julie, Betsy Hawthorne, Debbie
Osborne and Jamie.

lleadline May 20
for Pomeroy reunion
Deadline for the purchase of
tickets for the annual Pomeroy High
&amp;hool Alumni Reunion, to be held at
6:30p.m. on Saturday, May 23, has
been set for May 20.
Tickets for the dinner-dance, open
also to spouses of alunnhi, are $7 and
may be purchased at the New York
Clothin g House, Swisher·l:.ohse
Phannacy, or from Joanne Williams
at The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. The dance, open to the public, is
$2 per person and will be held from 9
p.m. to 1a.m. with the Dick Hawkins
Band providing music.
All alumni members are invited to
report to the Meigs High School
cafeteria at 6 p.m. on May 22 to
assist in decorating for the reunion .

Reunion May 23
The 52nd annual Rutland High
&amp;hool Alumni Reunion will be held
at 6:30p.m. on Saturday, May 23, in
the elementary school gymnasium.
Reservation deadline is Friday,
May 15. The cost per ticket is $6 a
person. The ticket includes dinner,
dues and a dance with the Mullins
Brothers and the Last Shot Bai!P
providing music from 9 p.m. until!
a.m. Names and money for reservations are to be submitted to the
Rutland Alumni Assn., P. 0. Box
125, Rutland, Ohio 45775. Those
unable to attend are asked to send
one dollar dues to the above address.

Keep tape handy
Keep a reflective tape handy in
your c1r's glove compartment in
cue you have to do emergency work
on the road at night.
I

and Mrs. Shennan Cundiff, Mr. and

Mr. Cartoon stages

show ot high school

Christopher Buchanan

Social Calendar
TUESDAY
MOTHER-DAUGHTER dinner,
Pomeroy United Methodist Women,
social room of church, 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Carry-in dinner, take own
table service.
POMEROY CHAMBER OF Cornmerce at noon, Meigs Inn. Rep. from
Corps of Engineers to speak.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM
Tuesday 7degree.
p.m. Work
in entered apprentice
All members urged to attend.
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Work in entered
apprentice degree.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, Disabled
American Veterans, 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Chapter Home, Butternut Ave.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7: 30
this evening in high school band
room . Plans will be made for band
camp, Memorial Day parade, fund
drive projects.
W

E

D

N

E

5

0

A

DAR Continental Congress meeting
in Washington, D. C. for several
days. They went on Wednesday by
~us and returned on Sunday
evening.
l\1rs. George Burns and Mrs. Clara
Williams attended an antique show
at the Cyliseum in Athens recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Henry and
Mrs. Thebna Henry visited on
Thursday with Mrs. Martha
Coleman and Chris Ward in Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davidson
of Grove City, Ohio spent Sunday
with her mother, Mrs. Hazel
Hoschar in Mason.
Mrs. Denver (Ann) Blake of Clif·
ton, ji:dythe Rogers, Henderson, and
Nina Bowles, Southside, attended a
Postmasters Seminar at Jackson's
Mill recently.
Mrs. Brenda Dadisman and
daughter, Brandy, of Pataskala,
Ohio visited Mrs. Thebna Henry
over the weekend. Other guests on
Mother's Day were Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Henry and sons of Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Shennan Ford spent
the weekend visiting their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Day, Pickerington, Ohio.
Mrs. Kenneth Ault of New Albany,
Ohio visited several days with her
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Johnson at Clifton.
Miss Theresa Smith of Clifton is a
patient at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. John Sheets has returned
home from Pleasant Valley Hospital
where she was hospitalized
following an auto accident.
Mr. Lester Johnson of Clifton is
much improved from a recent
illness. ·
Dr. Edward Spencer a nd
daughter, Dawn, of Bluefield, W. Va.
spent Saturday evening visiting his
mother, Mrs. Sarah Spencer, and on
Sunday morning he took his mother
and daughter out to eat breakfast.
Several persons from this area
went to Charleston on Saturday·
evening where they saw the Kenny
Rogers Show and included Mrs. Denver Blake, Jacki and Dawn, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Kearns, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Btake, Miss Dorothy Blake,
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. George Carson.

y

POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
lions Club, Wednesday at noon at ·
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 Royal
Arch Masons Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Bosworth Council 46 Royal and
Select Masters 8 p.m.
TIIURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE,
Thul'8(1ay, 8 p.m. at the Grange hall.
Baking and sewing contests will be
held.

RTA to meet
The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association will meet at
12:30 p.m. Saturday' at the Meigs
Inn. Reservations are to be made at
!192-3887 by Wednesday.

The Mr. Cartoon Show featuring
Mr. Cartoon and Beeper from
WSAZ.TV was presented Saturday,
April 25 at Meigs High &amp;hool. A
crowd of more than 11100 children
and adults attended the benefit for
the Amedcan Cancer Society.
Children met with Mr. Cartoon
and Beeper for autographs and pictures. Also on hand were clowns
selling balloons.
The proceeds totaled $1827.45. All
area sponsors and places of business
which sold tickets have the gratitude
oftheACS.
Volunteers helping included Debbie Grueser, Cinda Harris, Suzanne
Wolfe, Delores Frank, Erma Smith,
Harliss Frank, Jan Norris, Sandra
Baer, Jan Hill, April Smith, Kim
Pauley, Jeannie Welsh, Becky Rife
and Pat O'Brien.
Mary O'Brien was Mr. Cartoon

The Mei~s County 6-H Pleasure RidenJ met ott'
thc home of Julle Elberfeld •.m April 20. There

asked'que:rt.lon:J regarding horses by Julie Elber_feld. Roll call w1u1 llll'IWeret.l with a part of a hor-

wen!liix rnembt!r.1 in11Uendance.

se.

The group discus:ted :Jhows in .f.H and fonrui .
tm.t wen.~ to 00 turned in, The mem~rs were

menl.s. - Be*ty JU.l!!'nt, Reporter,

Mrs. William Cundiff, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Cundiff, Becky and Doug Lave~&gt;­
der, Mrs. Jim Riffle and son, Matthew, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lawson, all
of Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Tea(ord, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Teaford, Sherry and Angela,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. AI Harmon,
Wendi and Crystal, Minersville;
Mrs. Robe{t Murphy, Veronica,
Debbie and Robbie, Chester ; Mary
Lou Cundiff, Terry and Leslie Cundiff, and Lloyd Hummel, Columbus
and Tod Cundiff, Chester.

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Howarch new partner, flirtatious Fern Flagg, tries to add
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Pnrneruy, Ohio 4&amp;789, 992-2156. &amp;.!cunei cla..'l'J
poslatce paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: Tile A&amp;'!OCialed Press, Inland Dal·
ly PreSI A11socladoo and the American
New:cpapt!r Publl!ihen A!I."'Udation, National
Adverti l! ln~ Representative, Bran~m
New!JP~~pt:r Sale11, 733 Third AvttUe, New

Yurtt, New York 10017.

11'0111 fiHIO

(IJ
~OORAM
NANNOUNCI!b

i

NIGHT CIALL!IIY
DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
11:28
t:;IN I!PDA'I£ NEWS
11:30
• Ul THE TCIBGHT
IIIOW
(IJ ROSS BAGLEY IHOVW
.
CiliiOYIE'"(DRAIIA)••• 11 11an
on 1 l'll!llrO!Ie" 11163

THIS WEEKEND AT
MEIGS INN
9 till 1

.CIJ (l2). ABC NEWS NIGHT·

BARNEY

HOW's TATER

DOIN' IN
KIDDY-GARDEN,
MISS BESSIE?

FINE AN'

LINE Anchored by Ted
Kop.2_et.
8liJ CBS LATE MOYIE OR
NBA CHAMPIOIIIIIIP GAME
'COLUMBO:T1oubled Wottro'

-- AN' LEFTS

UPPERCUTS

DANDY!!

Lt. Columbo' I cnriae-becomes

TODAY HE
LEARNED ALL

ahlp'e entertainer It murdered.
Star•: PeterFalk. Gueat Stare:
Robert Vaughn, Poupee Bocar.

ABOUT

(Roptlf)(HihtNBAChomolon-

WOMEN'S
RIGHTS -·

lhlp h11 not been deci'ded ,

game flvo of 1ho NIIA Ployolfa,

~ :b CAPTJON~D NEWS

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

ALL LEGAL BEVERAGES

.

SERVED

(I MOYIE 'Eoay Come, E..y

09' 11117
11:50 CilliiCONCEI!T:ANTHONY
NIWLIY S!ngor·compoa...
~nlholly Nowloy 'trformo.hll
nlgh1olub oc11ft Mtnft Corio;
among the fnt~~rH aonge are
'Who Can I Turn To,; 'Once in A

Daily .......... ••... . . .. . . ..... IS Cent.s
S u b!!crl~

not desirlntc to pay the carrier
rrwy remit in advance direct l u Tbe Dally
&amp;ntint:!l on a 3, I or 12 month ba:!lls. Credit
will be ~lv en carrier each month.
No suh'ICriptlons by mall pennlttl!d In tUWI\"'
when: horne carrier !len' let: is available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ohio aid Wett \'lrllllll
3Month .... . .. . , ................ 110.50
Sixmvnth ..... , ......... , ........ llHO
1Year .. ...... . .. ...... . . ..... ... S33.00

ru ... o... ~cr.ohio

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992·3629 • Pomeroy,
, Oh.
You Must Be 21 or Accompanied
by Parent or Lepl Guanliln

aDd Wes t VIFJ:I•il
3 Mootll . . . . . ..... . ... .. . ' ... .. .. 111.00
6 Mooth ................... . ...... 1*1.111
l Year . •. .•... . .•. . . ..... , · .. !.,. . f!l ...

I SU66E5T
'(00 REWRITE .
IT ...

MA'18E I COULD TllROW
IN ANOTHER BROTHER .•
II

i

I

I

I
I

••

12:00

lifetime,' and a tribute to
Bro.dwev.
CIJ(li)··TU~IDAYMOVIE Of

THI WI!IK 'Biby lllut Morine'
1i70 Slor11 Jon Ml(&gt;haol Vln·
'lJ!IUl.tyn~ O'Connor.
'
12:30 l1J • Ul TOMORROW
COAST·TO.COAST Guool:
Johl' F. Lehman, Secrettry of

lho Navy. (911 mlno.)
12:41 CIJ MOYIE ·(DRAMA} ""%
• Uftt" 1971
12:18
CBN IPO!ITSIIEPORT
1:00
EYI~ INCIIUSINCl
.
FAITH

~

ONE 15N'i'
FI':EE 'TO 6-0
UNDER TH 1'5 .

(J

1

tSNORGTI

J KJ

Now arrange the circled leners to
lonn the surprise answer , as sug gested bv the abo&gt;o~e canooo

I

Prlnt8118werhei'B:

[I I I I I )
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday·s [

Jumbles OUASH FAMEO EIGHTY LOCATE
Answer Turned to get wate r-A FAUCET

Jumbll Boote No. 1&amp;, contllnlng 110 puzzlea, Ia available tor $1.75 po~tplkt
trom Jumble, c/o thle nBWipaper, Boll3o4, NOI'Wood, N.J. OTMB. Include yaur
name, addrHI, rip code end make checks payable to Newepll*bOC*I-

BRIDGE
Defensive signals
By Oswald Jaeoby
and Alan Sontag

NORTH

Kit Woolsey of Washington
D.C., computer expert and
top-ranking bridge player, has
just written a book called
" Partnership Defense in
Bridge." .
It is rather advanced, but
should be of real value to any
players who want to improve
lhis pari of the game.
Kit points ou t that there are
three types of defensive
signals: I. Attitude to show
strength or weakness. 2. Count
to tell partner that you have
an odd or even number of ·
cards, and 3. Suit preference
to tell your partner what
other suit you want him to
lead.
If you can avoid lookin g at
either the South or East hand
. and concentrate on West.
North and the bidding you are
ready to try this problem.
You open the ace of hea rts.
Partner plays the six and
. declarer the 10. What do you
. lead at tnck two'
Your partner has pia yed a
high heart. Can he111ant you to
play a second heart? No
chance!

He must have gtven you a
suit-preference signal to call
for a shift to a diamonri . That

&amp;· 12·61

.2

+ J IU9i l ~

t K J 10
+ Q73
WEST
EAST
• 3
+7
• .\QJ98 7
, 6 5 43
+ 74
tA 986&amp;32
+10 982
+6
SOUTH
+A KQ 62
• K 10

t Q
+ AK.I 5 4

Vulnera ble: Neith er
Dealer: South
Wes t

Norl b

East

Soutb

,.

,.

;•

6+

Pa ss

Pass

Pass

t+

diamond shift looks silly. but
i!,&gt;You are a good partner you
lead one. Your partner takes

his ace and the hand is down.
South bid badly, but if you
hadn't led that diamond . he
would have gotten away with

the bid

~,..;..,td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 G.I.'s outing
I Tete-a-tete 3 Seed coating
5 Egyptian
4 Urban
memento
dwelling
II Employ
5 Arenas
12 Salad item 6 Tapered
13 Related
7 Moslem noble
· 14 One of the 8 Spread out
kingdoms
into
15 Cross out
branches
Yesterday's Answer
16 Conclude
9 Recessive22 Roman
27 Navigational
17 Servant
gene carrier
dramatist
aid
19 Douglas - 10 Ravel's
23 One 29 Ceramic
20 Home
ballet
customer
slab
21 Weight
18 Donkey
24 Mental
31 Beyond
In Guinea
(Fr.)
pressure
the 2% Resonance 20 "- Slate"
25 Major
32 Nazimova
%3 Weight
(Texas)
divisions,
33 Evil
allowance 21 Offer
In biology
glance
r:-1~;---r.-

14 Di.lrnJssed

!5

"n Wu

a Very

- Year"
!6 Three,
In Calabria

Z7 Vault
Z8 James of
journaliam
30Gem
, 34 tn toto
35 Bargain
3e Involving
scales
37Aukgenus
38 " Porgy and
Bess" role
3t TV's Nonnan
DOWN
I TV's Everett

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

a working vecatlon when the ·

.POOTMASTER : Send addre!IS to The Dally
Sentinel, ll l Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohkl 4$719.

SUI!SCRIPTION RATES
By Carriertr Mteor Roa1e
Ont! week ... . . . .................... 11.00
Or~Month , .............. .... . . .. . . $4.40
One v~~r .-- .. ... -- ..... -........ ' f$1.110

Hd C.o" 111110

"EWS
~Jonoller,
(W • · HAftT ,TO HART
hoapflollted and

REG. RETAil. 14.11

REG. RETAil. 14.51

.

CIJ(fj) MYSTERY! 'ThoOotec·

MOTH
BALLS

SYRUP

ffi

l:BN UPDATE NEWS
. (!) TUESDAY NIGHTAT
THE MOVIES 'The Sfa• Maker'

when Cindy myaterl6usly van ishee , and a aeries of crazy
clues indicate their roommate
has mel with foul play. (Repeat)

LUX

KLEENEX
BOUTIQUE .

tMRS.
BUTTERWORTH'S

epaal)

(])(IJ)OI THREE'SCOMPANY
Jack and Janet turn detectives

·, 1!00&gt;~iT AiL' 1.01

,..69C

rJ

CIJ .I.ClO_CLUB

... $219
REG . RETAIL S1.07

tJ

I MERPETI

1981 Stars : Rock Hudson ,
Suzanne Pleahette .

REGULAR OR WITH IRON

The Daily Se ntinel
!USPS lls.IMI

II I

run and melody with host Dean
Mart in and hi agueata Frank Sin atra, Orso.n Welles, Bob Newhart and Dam Deluise. Also,
filmed comedy clipa of Goldi e

•.

30' OFF

""

_ ~·-·

I VENET

MATCHO ...ME
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
CIINUPDATENEWS
8:00
• (!) DEAN MARTIN 'S
COMEDYCLASSICSAnhourof

CLEANER

FRESH $C91T

1.

~

,.,,$,17

REG . RET All 12.41

2--or.

AFTER HAVt~ '
ME 8U~TEP ON THAT
PHONY 6REAK·tN

IHAMPOO
NORMAL, OILY, DRY.

and Lacy J. Calton.
ALL IN THE FAMILY
(B. FAMILY FEUD
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
.(I) TICTACDOUGH
C1J (HJ MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
llDJ !t.EWS
7:30 (2) . BULLSEYE
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Braves
•• Plt1o~r9h Plroleo
8CIJ JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW

r! OWSVER .. I /11113HT ~E
WIL1.1NG TO WITHDRAW
IT--IF YOU CAJ.J CONVINCE
MS YOU : ~ T END TO

HE~E

BRICK

BOWL CLEANER

.

vou·ve (;OT A
NeRve .. COMII&gt;J'

REO. RET~IL 12.11

REG. f'ETAIL 12.11

REO.,

performer&amp; include Merle Haggard, Chartle Ric h, Johnny Lee

_

~

dependence, Kana•a . Gue st

r~sh~o:w~c~ha~i:rm::an~·----~-~&gt;n=:;;;;;;:~=~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiir=i:;;;;;;ii;"
AOlvltloaoiMuiUmedii,IIK!.

I.....I ..r .... I I
·-·-

Roy Clerk ho•t• 1 rousing
country mule l81tinl from In·

I

MAY

IDERM~~~~?sGR~moved
Acne
Psoriasis
Exzema
All Skin Diseases
GENERAL PRACTICE

'. .

MAY 12, 1981

REG. RETAIL 12.40

ALLERGY

The Dail

Television
VIewmg

Mr. and Mrs. RoQert Elberfeld served fefresh-

TOOTHPASTE

Cundiff transfers to Guam

MEIGS DELEGATES- DeMolay Legislative Day was held at the
Slate Capital buDding in Columbus Saturday. The elected delegates from
each chapter served in the House of Representatives or the Senate. From
the Meigs Chapter were, left to right, Jeff Elliott, Mark Cline and Vaughn
Spencer.

DICK TRACY

. Meigs CoUnty 4-H news

Mason News reported

.

Ohio

II

AXYDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

One letter oimply stands lor another. In this sample A i1
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apoalrophea, the len(lh and formation of the words are ali
hints. !aeh day the code lellers are different.
O .Q K

'.

VZTK '

cavnOQuOTES
RK U0
Z· U

0 QS DN
OD

ox

· OQSDN

OQK
OQKW

GNGJ . - UDCSTK
DRUTCSK
Ylllte!UJ.,_ Cryplaq111te: AN IDEAUST IS A PERSON WHO
HELPS OTHER PEQPLE TO BE PROOPEROUS.-HENRY

F6RD

,'

Somd~ke- ·
NEW YORK (AP) - llu1norist Sam Levenson grew
up in a hou8ebold that was financially .pD.Qr, but which
wu rich In inspiration for his unique humor.
Leve111on said his mother used to tell her eight
ehildren to say they didn't like chicken, assuring

etiOUih fOOd for CGCnpany. All refusala of chicken were
followed by his lllllther's 11aying, later, " All those who
didn't eat clilcken don'tget desser t. "
1 The entertainlerllied last year at theage of 68.

�.Page-6-The Da1ly Sentinel

Pomeroy

''
W1nltcl to Buy.
WANTED TO ' BUY:
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
o BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT.
OH 10 992-3416.

Tuesday. May 12, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

Group endorses school bond
issue at recent sorority get-together
Preceptor !!eta !!eta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority endorsed
the two and one-haH mill bond issue
to be voted on in the Meigs Local
School District next month during
their meeting Thursday night at the
: Meigs inn.
It was explained prior to endorsement that passing the bond
issue in the district will not increase
taxes but will penni! about a million
dollars in tax funds to remain in the
.. district through a special approved
/ arrangement with the state.
New Offiejlrs installed by Janet
Thei§S. vic( president. were Clarice

Krautter, president; Donna Jones,
vice president: Rose Sisson,
secretary; Velma Rue, recording
secretarY: j{uby Baer, treasurer,
.and Lillian Moore, city council.
A letter of thanks was read from
Jean Werry, retiring president. It
was noted that Mildred Karr is
~ospitalized in Florida and a- round·
robin letter was sent to her. Committee reports are due at the next
meeting and plans were made fbr a
picnic to be held on May 21 with the
time and place to be announced.
Conunittees appointed by the new
president were: ways and means,

OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sll.ver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
Trea5ure Che~t Coin Shop,
Alhens, OH. 5fH221 .

Jane Walton, Jean Werry, Norma
Custer, Velma Rue and . Theresa
Swatzel; soeial, Mary. Morris,
Eleanor Thomas, Margaret Follrod,
Nellie Brown, and Pearl Welker;
service, Betty Ohlinger, Lillian;
Moore, Janet Theiss, Maidie Mora, .
and Reva Vaughan; program, June
Van Vranken, Roberta O'Brien, Ann
Rope, and Lucille Williamson; June '
Freed, sunshine; Vera Crow, scrapbook; Vera Crow, Rose Sisson,
publlclty; Theresa Swatzel and ··
Pearl Welker, telephone; and Lillian .
Moore, city council.

Wanted to Buy': class rings,
wedding bends, anything
stemPf1d, lOK, 14K, or 18K
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watche5. Call Joe Clark at
992·205~ at Clark's.Jewelry
Store. Pomeroy, Ohio 4.5769

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Shannon Counts, first place, Adolph's Dairy Valley;
Richie Carson, second place, Landmark; Mayla
Yoacham, K &amp; C JewelrY: back row, winners nine
through 12, Eddie Bacr, first place, Adolph's Dairy
Valley; Chad Carson, serond place, Bank One of
Pomeroy; Terri Roush, third place, Pome~oy Flower
Shop.
'

,

Public Notice
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Roger w. Davis, et. al.,

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Owner: Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio

Address:

Village

Pomeroy, Ohio

Hall,

.

Pia intiffs,
Separale sea led BIDS tor
· VS·
the General Contriict for
Guy Lee aka Guy W. Lee,
the weatherization of the
buliding, formerly the eta I.,
·Defendants.
Pomeroy H ig h School
Cue No. 17815
&lt;work will include furring
NOTICE BY
and insulating masonry
PUBLICATION ·
walls, interior finishes,
To Pauline Stevens aka
repair and weatherization
of windows, and roofint), Mrs. Robert Stevens, if

Public Notice

3

the south line of George

Howell's 47 acre tract to

be

kin,

deVisees,

47

Our new

Phone 992·3941 from 9·6.
Someone

Ground Hog Contest. First ·
prize : $500.00 cash. Tri ·"
County Sport Shop, Pt.
Pleasant. Stop in tor
details. 1·304-675·2988.

legatees,
if any,

plicant

4
Giveaway
Adorable black &amp; while kit.'
tens . Ready in 2 weeks. 949· '
2430.
.
.

minimum of two years
college and two years sales
experience. if you quality
send resume to : Rt. 1, box
287, Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631.
An E.O.E.

Puppi ~s, ·6 weeks old. 3 ·
992-77Sd'..,":
males',J Herrl~l~.
r~t
'i) p · ·

CommuniJ.Yo,. ~ervices
Worker to wo~if. 1 cl'l' ilh in·

be .refunded the payment,

Spri ·ngs

and any non-bidder upon so

@Wanted :

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cast-a·for ·
Classlfleds and~
Savell I

vicinity , '

itial or group of figures
counts es a word. Count

name and address or
. phone number 11 used .
You'll get better results
if you describe fully,
give price. The sentinel

reserves the right to

1. classify, edit or reject
RECOGNIZED - Mrs. Maude Bailey, 98, was
recognized on Mother's Day at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center as the oldest mother. She was presented
an orchid corsage by Tom Reese, administrator, who Is

'

'• I

p1clured here with Terry Stotts, artlvity dlrettor at tbe
Center. Mrs. Bailey came to Ohio In 1965 frooiCalhoun
County, .W. Va. She bas four children, numerou\l gnandchlldren and great-grandchUdren, and one grea~greatgrandchild.
_

Wednesday night for mother-daughter
fete at Tuppers Plains church
The annual mother·daughter Torrence, the mother with the most
banquet of the St. Paul United children .
Favors were provided by
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains
was held Wednesday night with Mrs . Coggshall . Simmons Insurance
Carl Barnhill and Mrs. James Stout Agency, Bank One, and The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. Mrs.
as hostesses.
Barnhill
and Miss Stout made the
Prayer by Mrs . Chester GorreU
preceded the covered dish dinner hat favors, and Mrs. Floyd Stout
with Mrs. Donald Harris reading provide the flowers for the table
decorations.. Games were played
scripture from Proverbs 31.
Readings and poems included " Only with prizes going to Mrs. Brooks,
a Child" by Mrs. Dorothy Stout ; Missy Harris, Betty Mattern, and
"Mothers Were Once Daughers" by Sue Caldwll.
Door prizes went to Mrs. John Ar·
Mrs. Bill Francis; "The Legacy" by
Mrs. Hazel Barn hill ; "Superlative baugh, 1}1rs. Grace Stout, Mrs. KenWords" by Terri Stout ; and "Who neth Miller, Mrs. Lawrence Balser.
Loves You" by Mrs. Mildred Ca ld- and Mrs. Francis. The Lord's
Prayer concluded the banquet.
well. .
Flowers were presented to Mr~ . Named co-chairmen for the 1981
Edith Harper, the oldest mother ;' banquet were Mrs. Roger Spencer
Mrs. Kenneth Caldwe ll, the and Mrs. Mae Vineyard.
• Attending were Mrs. Evelyn Spenyoungest mother ; and Mrs. Audrey
cer, Angie Spencer, Mrs. Jean Spcn-

.\

.

.

'

1 Wanted
I For Sale
) Announcement

I For Rent

sent cards. Herman Will,

21. _ _~---

.

~.

I- Card of Tlt•nlll
2-ln Mtmor.t"'
1- Artnounctmtnh
11- 0IWIIW•y
l-Ha,pyACII
t-Loat •nd Found
. 1-Yarct Salt
t-Public S•l•
· &amp;Auctttn

.,

Georgia &amp; Harley Smith .

19. - '-_
-20._..;.
_
_-_
_-

©Yard Sale: Friday, May ,
15 from 9·4 at the Bill Cross •
residence on Main Street, '

11- HfiJwanttcl

Women's . and

IJ- Sit\l•tM W1ntld

clothing ..

men's

©Garage sale: May 131hru
16. ·4 wheel drive truck, car,
guns,

furniture ,

en ·

CYclOpedias, clothes, etc.
Rt. 7 to Forest .Run Rd. to
.Morning Star. • Witch for "
~~!:..:.!j,.:.!~~;:-JI''~ns. Rein or shine.
'

peting, extra large storage
building. Naturalgas fur·

nace. Three fourths acres.
Owner will finance down
payment.
Located
in

Bashan. HI4 ·985·439S.
App. 6 mi les from Racine &amp;
Pomeroy .

Total electr ic 3 bedroom
home with ut ility room &amp;
garage. Situated on a large
lot. 742·2047.

©4 t;~ml ly yard 5ele, Don
Rea's residence . . May
13,14,15 from 10·4. Slate Rt.
124, •W.ner5vtll~ ·on1o:
...-..~11 .Thirti house In car]leratlon
·nT!~!fl'r4-1rtl line.
.

IUIIntU
ONortunlly
U-Monty fO LNn

''

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex -

be~rpom

....

eMERCHANDISE

.

..

1J- YIIII

,., ,.

&amp;~

'

W. D.

t4-MoftfCYCitl

,,_

22-lfl•rms tor lilt

&amp;

~~~,. ~.,..

Accnwtts

"-Autoat.-ir

M-lutinnl eullcUntt
&amp;-Lots &amp; Acr~,..
M-ltll .......... ...

/

.SERVICES

·-WHiton

It- Home llirlprl,-tlfttftfl

want-Ad Advtrtlslne
Dtldllntt

n Neon I~''".._
ltrMfflfiY

..,....

12-PIUM"IIIt&amp; IICIUiinl

D-I,CIYiflntl
14-lltmiQI

I tllltfrtttrltlfln
15-0IMrll NM~U. .
16--M.H. • .,.,,
17-U-...ttry

2:)11 P.M . Dilly

UWtnherU"*r

,,.....,.

Cltll

•••
..•••..

.....

1••

CNrtt
I.JI

1.00
Ul

1.71

""*' .... «*fHry: 4 Ctfth ..,. wtnl, U ••

I It! """""' Cl,_ ef
Mfftlm'"". Cll~ 1111 lf¥1Mt.

.....ltMIIM'HtlltMY""'II .. IfiKCtpfelllonly .... callilwl..
....... U ctltl ,.._,,.
ctfrYifll lo'a 'N•Mitt • IR Cart tf Tfle

'

* ••

.

'

.

SWIMMING
POOLS:
PRE ·SEASON SALE:
$999.00
INSTALLED!!

- ---

Any size built to your
specifications. Models
in Meigs, Gallia and
Mason Coul\lties.

Just off Rt. 248, 3 miles
from Chester. Good con·
dilon, 3 bedroom 1969

Above ground pool com -

Sunrise Park mobile home,

located on 3 and one fourth

acres of level ground,
Double garage, other out

buildings. 992·2588 or write
Box Holder, P.O. Box 249,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
For Sale : 197614 xx 70 Win ·

rooms, 4 bedrooms. A
lot of remodeling has

dsor mobile home . Has new

make a nice home. Also
an apartment, and a
store building that br ings in some extra

in sale, 4 sets at anchors,
blocks, concrete sets. Cen ·
tral air cOnditioner, has a
circular kitchen. Large bay
window in front. For more
information cal l992 -5533.

been done and would

money.
Al l for
$36,000.00.
CENTRAL AIR FOR A
HOT SUMMER - Is
iust one of the niCe
features of this 3
bedroom home. Has a

hoi water tank. Including

34

Business Buildings

35

siding,

© 39 , acres

and

is

all

Lots &amp; Acreage

houses, several barns ,
and mineral rights . Nice

locat io n .
Ask ing
$68,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Clel~nd, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATI!S
Jean Trussel 949·2660
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner

992-5692
OFFICE 99l-2259

&amp;m
.· [9
T
General

1Housing
Headquarters

EAFORD

in

Bedford

Township . 985·4194 .

Rentals

nice I iving room, and 3
bedrooms, all on one

floor. Could have a full
basement, just needs
the floor. $19,500.00.
FARM -113 Acres with
several
bottoms,
pasture la nd , and
timber land, has 2

liner, and installa1ion un·
der norma l ground con·
ditions. Free shop at home

service. Calll-800·624-8511 .

41

Houses for Rent

4 rooms and bath, stove
and refrige!rator furn ished.
Newly decorated. Dep. req.

992·3090.
Three bedroom house. 742·
2126 .
42

Mobile Homes

for Renl
2 bedroom Mobile Home,
funished , adults preferred.

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water· Sewer·Eiectric
Gas Line· Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups

1
-Sl Acetylene welding torch
wllh 75 foot of hose. Heavy

Septic Tanks
County Certified

and cutting t ips . Chester

Cheshire, Oh.

Faulty, Pigley Ridge . 985·

Ph. 367-7560

du ty gauges, and welding
4209 .
•C Pony saddle, ca rt, other

tack. House planf soil. Hor se manure, sack or truck.

Coll eclor items . Eskey
Hill , Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Oh io.
992-3885 evenings .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
A WIDE SELECTION
OF SHRUBS
&amp;ROSEBUSHES
FOR LANDSCAPING
YOUR LAWN

."?0 _

...- .

POMERoY
~ LANDMARK
E. Main St.

Pomeroy

Deposit. 992-27 49.

Mobile Home Par k. 247..
3942.

~~======1~· 7~·1~1~fc~1

located above ground at
Furnished two bedroom
mobile home on private lot.

Alhens, Ohio. 53,000.00
each . Phone 1·304·422-2781.

No pels. Deposit required.
949·2253.

4 14,000 gallon

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

located above ground at

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

BAILEY'S SHOES

For a li of your wiring needs .

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleporl, Ohio

L et George Mtllcr check
your present elec trical
syste m.
R: es td ential
&amp;Commerc1a1

NEW STORE HRS.

4~4===A~forp=a=Rent
r~t=m=en~l== ~~~~~!~~~
TranspartatJen

• Hot watu T an• s

~epOJir i ngS inc e

Head&lt; 11.1rtr•t:,
_ _t:.,_ •

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ l0" - 20 ·JO H.P.
HA 60"-lHO H.P.
HE 60"-4l-80 H P.

ENTERPRISES

R1. l S1de Hill Rd .

• Excavat ing
• Septic Systems
• Water , Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
• Du mp Tru ck
L 1censed &amp; Bon ded

PH. 992·7201

Rutland, Ohto

PH. 742·24ll
5 ll ·llc

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon. -Fri .
9 a.m .-5:30p.m.

4 15·1 mo .

" Specirill Rilles For'·
... coin Laun dnes
,.. Rental Propert ies

ALL STEEL

... Apt . House owne rs
Home I"arks

...- Mobile

Farm Buildings
Sizes

" From JOxJO"
SMALL

992· 5682
10 7 tic

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4d to 12x 40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

Rt. J, B9x 54
Racine, Oh.

Ph . 614-84J·2l91
6 15ll c

Siding
Roofmg &amp; Gutter
Remodelin'g
Se rving Your Area for
20 Years

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

EUGENE LONG

From the Small es t
Hea ter Core to the
Largest Radiator

INSULAnON

f-!IIIISifH/

Pomeroy , Oh.

LEO MORRIS

IB l

Two bedroom furni shed
Phone
apartment . 992-5434 or I· 71
Autos lor Sale
1- ( 614) ·992·3325
304-882·2566.
-'----'=="'-'-'"-"'=-.. '
1976 Chrysler Cordoba, all
110 ACRES - Gooa
power,
only 22,000 miles,
Furnished 2 bedroom up·
fences, 2 farm ponds,
$1600.00. Phone 949·2145 .
stairs
apartment
.
Adults
drilled well, old barn, 4 ·
only , no pets. Middleport.
Box 65, Portland, OH .
bedroom ranch home
1977 Diplomat. 55100.00.
992·3874.
Ph. 843-4912
with full basement. New
742·2025
SS.oo Monthly
gas well with free gas .
$70,000.
Serving the foll owing
Furnished three room
townships: Lebanon,
31.5 ACRES - Rolling
apartment . Quiet neigh- 1962 Cornel. 1980 Twin Star
Sutton, Letar.t, Olive,
land on paved road with
borhood. No pets. Deposi t Honda. Color TV. 992·3732.
Orange, Salisbury, Bed·
rural water available.
required . Phone949·2253.
lord, Chester, Sa lem,
Will make a nice small
1974 Pont iac Fireblrd. 400 Scipio, Rutland and
farm or development.
Efficiency
apartment
for
automatic.
Call anvllme at Harr ison
MIDDLEPORT
rent . 992·5434 or 1·304·882· 1.304-773-9170.
LArge 1 room home
2566.
with 1'h baths, new nat.
72
Trucks.for Sale
gas furnace, central air,
For rent: newly remodeled
new shingle root ,
one bedroom apartment in 1978 Dodge truck . $7,200.00.
garage and nice corner
Middleport. Furnished 742·2025.
lot . Can move right In
with all utilities paid.
alter closing.
S235.00 P&lt;1r month . 992-3190. 1971 Chevy truck for sale.
7 ACRES - Free gas
Vinyl &amp;
$350.00. Has no motor but
supply, Leading Creek
Aluminum Siding
water , little one
One bedroom apartment has good transmission. See
•Insulation
bedroom home and two
furnished In Middleport. at 245 Mulberrv Avenue,
•Storm Doors
small bldgs. Asking only
Air conditioned, utll ities Pomeroy .
•Storm Windows
111,500.
paid. 5200.00 Pf1r month. M·
•Replacement
340 ACRES, M or L F from 8·3 call992·554.5.
73
Vanl&amp;4W.D.
Windows
New fences, plenty of
1978 .Ford Bronco, 31,000
locust for posts, free
Free
Estimate
Two bedroom apartment, miles. Customized. Call at·
gas, about 40 acres of
James
Keesee
furn
ished
or
Ufllurnlshed,
ter 6 p.m. $4,500.949-2324.
crop land . Good 5
in Middleport . $210.00
Ph, 992·2772
~droom
home, two
5-6·1 mo.
. bath5, nat. gu furnace • utilities Included. No pets. 1977 Chevy Blazer 4 M4 with
After 6 P·'(l· call 'm·7177.
qn State Route. ASking
low mileage, needs some
$225,000, but will con·
body work . 992-6114 after~
slder offer.
45 Furnished Rooms
p.m. or 99'2-2377 anytime.
BUILDING LOT- l'h
II
Home
Sleeping
room•:
bY
the
acres on Rt. 124 with
Improvements
week.
I(
lie~
en,
and
7
.
.,.4
_
_
.::
M:!:o~t~or~c:ly!::cl!.!e!.s
__
drilled well, electric and
television loungt, Corryout pad5 for trailer. Only a
store and restaurant within 1978 Honda 7505 Super·.
few miles from coal
SOOfeel. 992·6370.
Under 7,000 miles, In
mines. $6,500.
\
condition . $1500.00.
EXCELENT HOME -:
1·30H7H550 or 61~·
Immacule!e 3 bedroom
44
, Space lor Rent
1498.
ranch home; 2 full baths
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
!ceramic), very nice
Park, Route 33, North of \f) l976 Suzuki RM250. Good
kitchen with dining ,
'Pomeroy. Large lots. Call c'Of1dltion. 247-3861 .
'
mostly carPf1led, 5torm
'm·7479.
doors and wl ndows,
PIIIO, garage end large
lot. Only $43,500.

V. C. YOUNG II

Y92·6121 or992-73 14

J&amp;F

ALL MAKES

• Ranges

- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
elec trical work
(Free Est•mates)

• Ba ckhoe

Call Ken Young

• O ISp OU I$

- Addons and
remodeling
- Rooftng and gutter

All Model s A variable

APPLIANCE SERVICE

t O•shwathen

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Call742 -3195
or 992 -7680
1·8 lie

Effective 4·6·81
MON . thru SAT .
910 5
Closed Thursday
H 1mo. pd.

• Dryers

Ph. 614-446·2801
J17·1mo

work

2·4 lie

•Was hers

1 or Syear term1te
guarantee
Located 1n Gallipolis

3 II li e

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

949·2862
949·2160

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

PARTS AND SE R VI CE

Al hens, Oh. $3,000. each. 1·
furnished, washer dryer, 304·422-2781 .
a.c., 2 children accepted.
No pets. Deposit. 992·7479.
FARMHAND feed grinder
&amp; sheller. And John Deere
43
Farms for Rent
60 tractor. 985·3846.

Roa c h es,
B i rds ,
Rod ents, Sptders , Fleas,
Ants and other sm all in ·
sect control .

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
esf1mates, 949·2601 or

new or rePa•r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .

tank s

3 bed room mobile home,

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Kee p Th•~ Ad lor Future ~el erence

6"-1--'F_,a,_r_,m,_,E,_q~u~i.I'.P!!'m,.,en..,t_
Four 15,000 gallon tanks

J19·

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

1915 Viking trailer, 12 x 65
two bedroom, big I iving
room Located in Country

Hours :
Mon .-Tues . 9·6
Wed s.·F ri. 9-7
Sat. 9-5
Closed Thurs.

Roush Lane

All types of roof work,

Garage for sale in Dexter.

$20,000. 742·2025.

full basement, 3
bedrooms, patio, new

carpeted .
Just
$21,500.1)0.
JUST 6 YEARS OLD And has a large kitchen,

pletely inslalled slartlng at
$999.00 . Price inc ludes
pool, deck, fence, filter,

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES
St1mson Ave. Athens,

tensive remodel ing.
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
4·26·1mo.

J&amp;L BLOWN

Seed &amp; Fertillltr

7!-AUIO, tor Sale

21-Moltllt-MtMtl ·

Rd . 28. Before 12 noon or af ·
ter 5 p.m . 949 · 2~18.

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL I! STATE

bedrooms, underpinned,
wood storage building,
and comes with a big

VIRGIL B. SR ., ,. 10 0 ,

51--HoustMICf OGOCfl
U- CI, TV, RICIIo Eq\llllmtnt
u-&amp;nliqup
54-MIIC . MlfCIIIndiSt
5~1ulld l nt Sll,lin
.M-Ptn tor Slit

•~

)1-HOMfl fDr Iaiit

Would make a nice ren·
tal property, $16,900.00.
NEW LISTING
12x65
RACINE
mobile home with 2

_ 216 E. second Street

64- Hey I Grain

Stnkts

,

eRENTALS

6J-l1Yti10Ck

U-Proftulonat

rooms, 2 bedrooms and
some new windows .

··

61-Farm l!quipmanl
12--WinrMfO Ivy ~
71- Trucks tor Salt

' 21 -

NEW LISTING - 1'12
story frame with 6

Real Estate

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

'

35 . --~---

5·8· 1 mo. pd.

3 miles from Ra cine on Co.

8 room house with bath &amp;
shower, full basement,

41-W•nttd to Rtf! I
11-EQUIP"Itrtl tor Rtnl

12- lntvranct
lil.,. a111inn• Tralnlne
IJ-IChDOIIIAitructiOn
• 16bello, TV
&amp; Cl fllt,.ir
tt--WantH To Do

'.

34. _ _ _ _ __

No Sunday Calls

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh .
Ph. 992· 5016
or 992·7505
4·1Hfc

2story home, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, full basement, good
location, Pomeroy. Call af·
ler 6, 992-7284.

Nice two story house, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, car-

(4')(16' , 8')(8' , 8'x10',

10'x10' , 10'x12' &amp; up)

949·2801

CHESHIRE 4·12·tfc

3:.:1_.....:H
:.::omes for Sa le
5 room house with full
basement, garage on
double lot at 280 7th St.,
Middleport. Shown by ap·
pointment. Call after 5, 992·
7143or992-7117.

.u-spaet tor Rtnl

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

tains, bedspreads, rugs,
,jeans of all kinds and Sizes.

2~·, ----24
_ _ _ _ _ __

33. _ _ _ _ __

GLENN BISSELL

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560

lot: Nice at Sl LOOO.OO.
NEW LISTING - 2
story frame home with 7

41-MOUitlfOr It tnt
42-Mollilt Homt5
tor Rent
44-AJirtmtnf lor R tnt
0--flltDDml

t-W•nttdtoBuy

Racine, Ohio. presses,·cur·

-----,---

32. _ _ _ _ _ __

992·6595.

Sheds •
POLE BUILDINGS
1l'x20' upto40'x100'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS

Guaranteed

&amp; misc. jobs
around homes.

mowing
working

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dep1.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

9

....
_......................
·-··· . ". .
..

17 . _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ __

to

eANNOUNCEMENTS

card of Thankt,
© 1 wish to thank '01. ·Sub·
blah,' Dr . Berkich, and Dr.
words
Yodlawskl tor a successful
surgery and the wonderful
-+=+===t-..;...+..;..,'-il care the nursing staft "at
!~4~~~~~+~~il Holzer .Medical staft gave
me. Also to my friends and"
..
neighbors who called or

These cash rates
include discount

slsoo

FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings

18
Wanted to Do
Would like odd jobs. Lawn·

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

._,

· · a.ny ad . Your ad will be
put · in the proper
clasiflcation if .YOU'll
check !he proper box
below

Mobile Homes
for Sale

REESE BUILDINGS
Garages - Buildings
- Barns-Equipment.

For Silver Dollars

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
5-6·1 mo .

-::=:::;:;:=.:;:;::::;:;::::;::;==

32

13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
I N·
SURANCE been cancelled?
Lost your
operator' s license? Phone
992·2143.

PHONE
992·2156
'

Addren-----....--~--

space below. Each in· ·

room, ·finished double
garage, deck . _ Upper ·
sixties. 992·5420.

$}~to

Will do painting and all odd
jobs. Call949·2145.

~

Yol'd Sate ,
GARAGE SALE on En·
terprlse Rl. 33. Furniture,
auto parts, dishes and all ·
clothes. Startinp·Mey
From 1Q-5. R11n or .
992·7673. • .
.
7

"'

AND
HEATING

Brick hOme on wooqed
acre. Three bedrooms,
fireplace, unique family

Quality Buill
Economically Priced

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS

n4t.

Need Money? Need
Clothes? Why not get your
wardrobe at no cost to you
and earn extra dollars too?
For Information or in·
terview appointment call
992-3941 between 9-9.

WANT AD INFORMATION

Name------------------

Print one word in each

someone

are supplied. You need
good draft Ire~ clean
building or 'roomt 'where
you can sh,qW .Bifln;i81s to
prOSPf1cllve ciWhed: Must
be · in the 1 ~i~dleport·
Pomeroy area, salary
negolionable. Phone 992·
5427 alter 5: 30 p.m.

4694.

Write your own ad and or~er by mail With lhi&amp;-·
ooupon. Cancel your ad ljy phone when you get
results. Money not-refundable.

---

a

medication, food , and litter

©FOUND: large black dog ·
with white paws. Ap·
proximately 6 months old,
male. Found in the B'!ld
Knob·Porlland area. 843· ,

'

have

bOard cats for the Meigs
County Humane Society
while homes are sought tor
them . Cages, litter boxes,

Lost: .,p1al~~mi~ breed,
black Aul~h~.medjum size,
lost .lp lllf,,r~r,IYfand area .
While fle~·.4PI ar. Gentle.
8.Cq653. Reward .

12, 19

'

BUYING

KAUFPS

sundeck, two car garage, 2
and one half acres. Lovely
setting on SR 7 North. 992·

$185.00 to SSOO weekly doing
mailing work. No ex·
perlence required. AP ·
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 224·D, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.

position. Contact Beverly alum 1num siding, storm
Johnson at 388 ·8195. windows &amp; doors, big buill
Buckeye Communily Ser·, in porlh, big lot partly fen·
vices is an equal op- ced in. Metal building. 992·
7453.
.
portunity employer.

REWARD. Phone Dick
owen at 992·2651 or '19'1· .
5627.

returning the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS .wil l be
refunded $25.00.
H. D. Brown, D.D.S.
Counci lman
May7, 1981

must

dividuals wifli niental
retardation. ·paft·t i me

Lostond Found
LOST: Grey Schnauier
that answers to the name of
Schultz. Lost in the Rock"

and in good condttion, will

on

Polled tomato plants. An· ,
drew Cross, 247·2852.

@ '.(ariety~ kittens now.
available. Meigs County
Humane Society, 992·7416. .

fice of the Architect located
at 131 West Slate Street,
Alhens, Ohio upon payment
of S50.00 for each set.
Any BIDDER, ' upon ·
returning the CONTRACT
QOCUMENTS ~rOmplly

work

SALES POSITION · Local,
test growing business, is
taking applications for a
good, matured sales person
In th e Gallipolis end
surrounding areas. Salary
based on experience. Ap·

Faye's Gift Shop located in
lower Middleport.

maY be obtained at the of-

to

drilling rig. Phone 992-74114
alter 5 p.m. I

Flowers for Memorial Day. ·

lice: 151 Wesl Stale Street, have been named defen·
A! hens, Ohio, 45701 . A bid dants in a legal action en·
guarantse in the amount of titled Roger W. Davis, et
10 percent of tne Bid; or, a al., plaintiffs, vs. Guy Lee
bond for the full amount of aka ·Guy W. Lee, et al ..
the Bid as Surety for the defendants. This action has
execution of the contract, been assigned Case Num·
and a performance bond ber 17816 and is SPf1ndirig In
and a payment bond 1n the the Court of Common Pleas
~eill;",~Olml•l , Pomeroy,
amount of 100 percent or
the contract price sha ll be

(5)

Got som«·.free time? Start
your ownl business.' Start
selling AV.on. Be your own
boss. $tl your own hours.
The nar'der you work, the
more yolj'll earn. For
detells,'0call742·2354 or 742·
1
2755. " I (
I.

believable!!!! Give us a
call for more information
about this interesting work.

Copies of the CON·
TRACT
DOCUMENTS

'

bedroom
fireplace

antiques,

11

spring and summer line is
now available and is it un·

required

-.

Three or four
housE!', ca rpet,

trailer 70x14. 2 car garage,

.
IT'S BEELINE'S Show and .

Tell Time!!!!!

exa mthed at the following dress unknown; you . are
locations: Architect's Of hereby notified that you

Pomeroy Health Care Center, Is "Love is Ageless."
Pictured as they judged th'e entries Monday~~~:!'. Harold
Chaney, a resident of the Pomeroy Health Care Center,
MarY Stewart of the Senior· Friends Program, and
Kathleen Scott, a Retired Senior Volunteer. ,Open
house is being observed at the Pomeroy Health·Care
Center Wednesday from I to 7 p.m. There will be tours
of the facility, food, and entertainment during the di.y.
The public is invited.

us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

4 acres with 2

Contact Ed Burkett Barber, .
Shop, Middleport.

Friday, May 22, 1981, and their spouses,
then"' said office pub licly executors, administrators
and assigns of Pauline
opened and read aloud.
The .
CONTRACT Stevens ak~ Mrs. Robert
DOCyMENTS may be Stevens, if. deceased, ad·

-

tinel route carrier. Phone

1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver

said point. also bei
the
southeast corner of ue&gt;&gt;rue

received

time at Pomeroy, Ohio)

Business Services

rl!lnch brick home in Baurn

Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air . Call
992·2571, 985·4i45 or 1-687·
6429.
.

Announcements

coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

county highway No. 33,

Iars,

©Standing timber or chip
wood. 992·5833 or 992·5050.

the center line of the inter·

by living, whose last known
Honorable Cla rence An· address was 110 Northeast
drews, Mayor of Pomeroy; 18th Aven ue, Boynton
at the office- of the Mayor Beach, Florida 33435; and
until Noon, (applicable the unknown heirs, next of
will

NURSING HOME WEEK - Posters 'promoting
Natioaal Home Week made by Meig11 elemenfary
students were judged Monday with the ~as h prizes of
$5,$2 and $1 going to Diana Williamson, sixth grader at
the Salisbury Elementary School; Jeremy Stone, third
grader at Salem Center; and Kathy Neutzllng, sixth
grader at Salem Center. Honorable mention went to
Donna Lambert, sixth grader at Salisbury. Theme of
the posters, which will be displayed all ·week at the

Ice boxes,

etc. complete ~ouseholds .
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy., OH 4.5769. or
call9?2·7760.

'

Public Notice

as 8 young business person

and earn gOOd money plus
some great gilts as a Sen·

·-=---=-====='--

1

COLORINIJ CONTEST WINNERS - Winners of
the recent coloring contest sponsored by The Daily
Sentinel and local merchants were announced Saturday. Whmers were in two age groups, four through
eight and nine through 12. First, second and third place
respectively were awarded $15, $10 and $5. Winners
pictured are, front row. I~r, four to eieht age

31
Homes for Sale
Beautiful 1hree bedroom

Fashion Consultant needed
NOW! Ladles fashion film .
CHIP WOOD. Poles max. Average ·s8.oo per hour.
diameter U'' on largest For appointment interview
end. S12.50 per ton. Bundled call992·3941 between 9-9.
slab. $10.50 per ton.
Delivered to Ohio Pallet ;;;--;;==:-c-:c=~,-,-Co., Rock Springs Rd., 12 Situations Wanted
Pomerby 992·2689.
Repair or remodeling
IRON AND BRASS BEDS· work, flooring, doors, wall
Old furniture, desks, gold paneling, ceiling, or floor
rings, jewelry, sliver tile, siding. 992·2759.
dollars, sterling, elc. Wood

/

/

1l
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

Free Estimates
Ca ll Collect

Ph . 843·3322
5-8·2 mo. pd.

Radiator Specialist

NATHAN BIGGS
3S Yrs . E)(peri ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, OH .

992-2174

Ph.

5·7 lie

Plumbing
Heating
WAT E R
WELLS .

82

&amp;

Domesti c and commercial ,

pump sales and service.
Tom Lewis Drilling. ·
Seasona l discount on pum · :

Does your house need a

ps. 1·304-895·3802 or 1·304· .
895 . 3641.

face lift? Or iust a Iillle
makeup? Call me &amp; I'll
have it looking young again
in no lime. Will do all tyPf1s

84 --~E;:;:
Ie=
ct::r"'
ic::
a-:1 --

of interior work ; paneling,

&amp; Refrigeration

ceil ings, floor ing, etc.; plus
exterior work, pa inting,

SEWING

shingling roofs , work oing,

Repairs ,

shinglinf any SIZe and
shaPf1. 30 years experience

makesl 992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.

In carpetry. Ref erences
pro vided upon request . 992·

Authori zed Singer Sales
and Servi ce. We sharpen

6293.

.Scissors.

13
Excavating
COMPLETE sever in·
5tellatlon · &amp; backhoe ser·
vi ce for Racine·Syracuse
sewer dlstrlc1 . Dozer work
if needed . 949·2293.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

.

MA"C H 1N E
service,

all

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

Nex t to state Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

�..

12, 1981

Pa e-8-The Daily Sentinel

ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT·

DAV field service ¥nit will visit Pomeroy
Free assistance for local veterans
and their families will be availabie
when a Field Service Unit of the
Disabled American Veterans (DAV)
visits Pomeroy on May 19. Thi• is

the eighth consecutive year that one
of these office-equipped vans has
traveled to conununities thtoughout
the state, bringing free benefits

coiBlSellng and clalm filing 1188~ medical care, Social Security, death
ce to veter!UIS and their families.
~. and more.
The DAV Field Service Unit will
During the paat sev~n yean, more
be located at 114 Buttemut Ave. than Ml,~ veterans and depen- :
These units are generally open from dents took advantage of tiUa free ser10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
·
- '4ce when It -came to their comA fully qualified and trajned DAv muniUes. At. a reaull of thea visits,
veterans' expert will staff the DAV National SerVice Officers flied
traveling ser\Tice faclllty. He can 107,000 claims for dllablllty comassist veterans and their families in pensatlon and pnlpn benefits ·
fillng claims for such federal and alone. Thoulandll ok!alina far other

'
.Enguteers
recommend
~, p an to offset jams
~!~~':~i:,e=:enf:i
A·
1

'
'

}

·

SALE ENDS SAT., MAY 18,1881

re=::ts::;:~

Job training programs, educational · the DAV to take advantage of tiUa
benefits, hospitalization · and free_servl~.

1

GAU.IPOUSFERRY,
about midway between Huntington
- The U.S. Army Corps o1 andParkersburg.
.
~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Engineers has recommended a $258
Some ~provement IS needed by 1
million plan to offset a towboat traf- 1985 or shipments of coal and other
fie jam that the federal agency says commodities will have to be
could overwhelm the Gallipolis rerouted off the river and around the
.... . ·
Locks and Dam by 1985.
damrtby :dail, truck or pipeline, the
The corps' plan includes con- repo sa1 ·.
VETERANS- ADisabled American Veterans field service unit will
struction of a $208 million two-lock
"Assuming use of the most ef·
be in Pomeroy, ll4 Butternut Ave., from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on May 19 to
canal bypass around the 44-year-old ficient ,operating policy, physical
provide free assistance for local veterans and their fanillies .
facilitytoeasetheOhioRiver'swor- capac1ty under the lock
st traffic jam, according to a report rehabilitation plan will be reached
released last week.
before !985," the corps said.
When dam rehabilitation is added • Tows average an eight-hour vyait
in, the project cost would top $258 to move 600 feet through the main
million, the report said.
Gallipolis lock, the report said. At
If the plan is approved, West more. ~odern Ohio River dams,
Virginia will pick ujl the tab for a trans1t tune through locks averages
small part of the project said Bill an hour.
Brown, a spokesman for !he corps.
The corps' .reconunended canal
Three people were injured m two treated and released.
But
the
state's
share
is
not
yet
would
be 2 nules long and 500 feet
separate accidents investigated
The patrol said an eastbound
known,
he
said.
wide,
which
would eliminate the
Monday by the Gallia-Meigs Post of vehicle driven by Brian D.
The
corps'
plan
is
one
of
several
narrov,
approach
into the present
the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Facemire, 18, GaUipolis, failed to
The patrol said a vehicle driven by stop at the intersection of Gallia CR alternatives outlined in the agency's locks, the report said. The canal
would be 18 feet deep above the locks
Valeria M. Labonte, 20, Chester, was 14 and 5 at 5:34 p.m. and collided report on improving the locks.
Other
suggestions
include
using
andl5feetbelow.
northbound on Flatwoods Road (CR with a northbound vehicle on CR 5
Two locks were reconunended for
26) in Meigs County at 10 a.m. when driven by Althea G. Notter, 37, switchboats to help break lock and
reassemble
tows
and
t~
charge
the
canal because anything less
the vehicle travelled over a hillcrest Gallipolis.
congestion
fees
to
force
marginal
would
be con~ested by the year 2015,
,•
and dropped off the right side of the
The force of the collision caused
operators
off
the
river,
the
report
the
report
sa1d.
road.
Notter's vehicle to lose control, go
Under a waterway development
The report said the vehicle then off the right side of the road and said.
The facility is located on the Ohio policy approved by the Carter adlost control, came back onto the road overturn.
ministration, West Virginia would
and then went off the left side. The
Notter was injured and taken to
be expected to come up with a small
vehicle travelled back onto the road, Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia
percentage of, the project's total
then off the right side and came to a EMS, where she was admitted for
cost. ·The rest of the money would
rest in a ditch, causing slight multiple bruises and was listed in
(Continued from page I)
come from the federal government.
REGISTRATION FORMS A IE AVA ILA ILE
damage .
stable condition this morning.
payrollof$1,475,033.39.
But a spokesman for the GoverInj ured were the driver and a
Her vehicle was severely
In 1980 - 2,326 patients were act- nor's Office of Economic and comA T·•THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS
passenger, Brenda K Bailey, 18, damaged while the Facemire auto mitted to Veterans Memorial munity Development said the.state
Pomeroy. Both were taken by was mode rat ely damaged .
Hospitalandtherewere7,610patien- will await President Reagan's
POMEROY, OHIO
private vehi cle to Veterans Facemire was cited for failure to ts seen through the emergency waterway project proposals before
Memori•l Hospital. where they ,were yield.
room.
deciding whether to contribute to the
POMEROY' ·OHIO
Medical staff members include L. locks' improvement plan.
D. Telle, M.D., Chief of Staff; J . H.
"Until some commitment is made
Ridgway, D.O., Vice Chief of Staff; to the Gallipolis Locks and Dam by
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
W. A. Mansfield, M.D., secretary; J . Congress, it's very difficult to say
Tenant program set
P. Conde, D.O., treasurer; E. S. what the state's position would be,"
POMEROY, OHIO
•
Southeastern Ohio League Ser- Villanueva, M.D., S. J . Blazewicz, said John Childress, transportation
MIDOLEPORT, OHIO
vices attorneys Jon Sowash and An- M.D.., Z. Dayo, M.D., M. Dayo, coordinator of the' economic
ne Manley will discuss problems of
Wade, JM.D.,
ENT specialist;
J.
renting apartments, houses and M.D.,
. WithP.rell,
M.D., J. A.
A free screening for speech, trailers at a meeting to be held at the Brawner, M.D., surgeon; T. B.
language and hearing problems will Corrununity Mental Health Center McGown, D.O., R. R. Pickens, D.O.,
•
be held Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 5 tonight at 7 p.m.
C. W. Thompson, radiologist; A.
p.m. at tile Community Mental
The free landlorcl/tenant program Sola, M.D., radiologist; R. Averion,
Health Center on Mulberry Heights. is being held in the Multipurpose M.D., radiologist; H. B. Davidson,
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
The screening will take 10 to 15 Room of the MultipU!llQse Health M.D., pathologist; G. H. Abelll ,
minutes . No appointment is Facility on Mulberry Heights.
M.D., G. E. Valley, M.D., internists;
necessa ry.
M. Simon, M.D., urologist; H. D.
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
Professional speech and hea ring
FiiP court actions
Brown, D.D.S., andK. Riggs, D.D.S.
specialists will be able to direct
A suit in the amount of $695.67 has
speech, language and hearing
RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
been
fil ed in Meigs County Common
problems in people of all ages.
'HID
Pleas Court by Household Finance Four emergency runs
1\'larriag-t• liccnst'
Corp., of Ohio, Belpre, against
Four emergency calls were anin the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1981 published in response to call
Marriage licenses were issued to Harold L. Whittekind, Pomeroy, et sw~red by local units Monday, the
made
by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United states Code, Section 161.
al.
James Edward Large, 39. MidMe1gs
Emergency
Medical
Service
.
Helen M. Capehart, Rt. I, Middleport, and Doris Geneva Horn, 38,
National Bank Region Number 4
Charter nwnber 9815
dleport.
and William R. Capehart, reports.
Circleville; Terry Delane Napper,
The
Middleport
Unit
at
11
:53
p.m.
27, Rt. 1,_Langsville, and Sandy Kay Sr., Rt. I, Middleport, filed for treated Gary Hart at a Middleport
Statement of Resources and Uablllties
Thousands
dissolution of marriage.
Davis, 20, Rt. I, Langsville.
Cash
and
due
from
depository
institutions
.
.
.
...
..
.
.
.
......
.
.................
631,1ro.OO ·
cafe and the Pomeroy Unit at 5:41
Vt•h·rans Memorial
Treasury
securities
....
.
...............
.
............
...
..
.
..
...
.
..
.
1,*,1ro.OO
U.S.
p.m. took Brian Bauer from W. Main
Final hvosters meeting
Obligations of States and political
Admitted .. Mary . Deren berger, St., to Veterans Memoria\ Hospital.
The Meigs Local School District' Pomeroy; Martin McCoy, Clifton,
subdivisions in the United States ..... ... .......... . ....... .. ........ : . ... 989,1ro.OO
The Pomeroy Unit at 9:10 p.m.
Vocal Music Boosters will meet at W. Va.; Maxine Sellers Racine· treated Tom Gillian at the sheriff's
All other securities ....................... . . , .....• , .. .. .. . .......... , .... 295,000.00
Federalfunds sold and securities purchased
.
·
·
7:45 p.m. this evening in the vocal Clyde Henderso n, Pomeroy: quarters and at 5:36 p.m., the
under
agreements
to
rese11
..............
,
................
.......
,
•
,
...
1,350,000.00
music room of the high school This Charles Blake, Racine.
Racine Unit took Maxine Sellers
,
Loans, Total (excludinguneamedincome) .. ...... •. .. .-. . . . ... 9,194,000.00
will be the fi nal meeting of the group
Discharged--Mabel Miller, from Route 124 to Veterans
Less: Allowance lor possible loan losses .............. .. . . ... . . . 121,000.00
for th is school year.
Kath ryn Cre means, Velma Memorial.
Loans, Net . .... 1, •...••••.•.•.• • .•...•. .• .•. • .• , .... . ............... 9,0'13,000.00
Winebrenner,
Vivian
Garnes.
Plan chicken barbecue
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
.
other
assets
representing
bank
premises
.•
,
.
..
.
..........
. . ...... , ..... , .. 119,000.00
Clark wins award
The Racine Volunteer Fire DeparAll other assets ................. .. .. . ........ .. . ........................ .. , 7JIOO.ill
Staff Sgt. William D. Clark, son of
.tment will sponsor a chicken bar·
rofAL~ETS ......................... , .................. . , . , , .. , , . 13,967Jij[QO - - - · I
beque, Sunday, May 24 at the Fire C. E. Clark, and Evelyn Clark, both
Demand deposits of individuals,
Station in Racine. Individual pieces of Pomeroy, is a member of the 9lst
Ph. 9t2-5776 Syracuse, Oh. •
2,448,000.00
prtnshps., and corps.
.lf chicken and dinners will be ser- Strategic Missile Wing, winner of
1ft
NOW
OPEN
FOR
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
ved. Members of the department are the Charles D. Trail Award for the
prtnshps., and corps.
9,553,000.00
SPRING SEASON
also accepting donations for the up- second r.onsecutive year at Minot
DepositsofUnitedStatesGoverrunent.
.......
..
.
...
....
.
.
.
.....
.
.
.
......
,
...
82,000.00
•
Potted
Plants
Air
Force
Base,
M.D.
::::i
coming fireworks display for the
Deposits
of
States
and
political
•
•
Complete
line
of
bedding
The award is g1ven to the unit in
'Fourth of July Celebration .'
II
subdivisions In the United States .. , .................... . . ................ 618,000.00
plants and hanging
Another barbeque, parade, and full recognition of its superior logistics
Certified
and officers' checks .......... .. ... . .............. ..... ..... . ..... 35,000.00
baskets.
schedule of activities are scheduled achievements during 1980.
Totall)eposits
•.•. . .. .' ....
12,734,000.00
Clark is senior weapon system
All Dozen Packs 95c doz_e.
for that day. All donations will be
Total
demand
deposits
.
..
.
..................
..
..
.
....
.
.....
3,115JQ!.OO
Hours : Open Dally 9101
controller at Minot Air Force Base
greatly appreciated.
Total time and savings deposits ............................. 9.011,QOOJ!Q
Sun. Ito 5
N. D.
'
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures)
- u,'lM 111!.00
Common Stock
·
'
a. No. shared authorized 5,000 (par value)
b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value) . .. . .. .. . .. . . ,. ........ , . , .... , .. 125,1ro.OO

HAV. E. y·ou REGISTERE.D.?
fQR . -The
Holzer Med1ca1 Cen ier
Ohio Valley Pub!1shmg Co.

'

Three hurt in
traffic wrecks

.

ROAD RACE

t .. .

Qr-2.97

•

• ID'Iar'Gili!W •
...2-4

10,000 METERS

Veterans .••

lHE DAILY SENTINEL
ELBERfELDS
heritage house

Meigs County happenings

NEW"YORK ClDTHING HOUSE
DAN'S BOOT SHOP

Free screening
scheduled
Wednesday

~~d~ev;e;lop~m;en;t;off~l;·c;e.;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

...;::

-c

-...

0 ••

•

•• '

••• • •••• 0 • • ••• • ••

' I

•• I

•

•

0 •

•

• • 0 0 •

0 '

•••

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

GRADUADon

theill chensh

Surplus . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . • ... . • . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . • . . . . • . . • . • . . . 125,000.00

1:::::::

c

0

z

c
Ill

St•lt•t•l gradu 01linn gifts (rom Elherfelds for tho~l'
high sr-hnol and mllt•gt• young ml'n and women on
your li ~t.

) mdl find famnus hrnnds of quality merchnn·
eli ~··· You'll find witit• sc•ll'&lt;'tions in I'Vt•ry detlartment
and you 'll find sa lt•, JWOJIII' . nn:~;ious to help you
rlt•&lt;'iti.-.
·
Plus Hallmark Grnduntion Cards and Gift Wrap.
- Hu y yo ur g ifts now.

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY

0

...~

~

Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
andothercapitalreserves , , ................ , .•. , ...• , .......... , ..... ...
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. . . ........ , ... ..... , . . .. . .. . .......... , ... , 1,:
TOTALUABIUTIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL .. , ... , .................... ~::.:.!
Amounts outstanding.as of report date:
Time certificates of deposit In denominations

ofllOO,OOOor more •. .• .• •••.... .•.••. •.•. ••• .•• , • , • o , . o. o

0 ,

.

0. 0. 0

0 0 . . .. 0

411,000.00

Average for30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date:

Total deposits ,

o • • • • • , o, •• o . , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , •• o • • • • o • • • ••

0

•• • • • • • • • •

12,370,tXIl.OO,

I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier, of the aboviHIIIIRed bank do
hereby declare that this Report ~ Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Gary J'. Norria
April 24, 11181
We, the undersigned dlrectOI"ll attest the correctn. of thla statement of reiOUI'Cill and
liabilities. We declare that it haa been e:ramlned by us, and to the belt of our lmowledle 1!111·
belief is true and correct.
,
/

::;:0:~ _:;_·~~~

-

~--~ -~~~~~

·.

\-\

George Nelgler

,.

. '·

. t!

j

~-"""'- "-•--,"---· '

Anlllble At Your 1.6C81 K ,.,. Stote

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